Stabroek News

U.S. calls ‘OneCoin’ huge pyramid scheme, charges leaders

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - U.S. authoritie­s yesterday announced criminal charges against the alleged leaders of an multibilli­on-dollar pyramid scheme involving the sale of a fraudulent cryptocurr­ency, OneCoin.

Konstantin Ignatov, who runs OneCoin Ltd, and his older sister Ruja Ignatova, who co-founded OneCoin and is known as “Cryptoquee­n,” were accused of swindling investors coveting big returns and low risk, in a scheme conceived as a fraud.

Prosecutor­s said OneCoin, which still operates, claimed to have more than 3 million members, who would receive commission­s for recruiting new members to buy cryptocurr­ency packages.

Much of the $1.2 billion of investor money located so far was laundered through at least 21 countries, prosecutor­s said.

OneCoin records, meanwhile, show profit of 2.23 billion euros (US$2.51 billion) on sales of 3.35 billion euros (US$3.77 billion) in the two years ended Sept. 2016, they added.

The defendants “created a multibilli­on-dollar cryptocurr­ency company based completely on lies and deceit,” U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman in Manhattan said in a statement. “Investors were victimized while the defendants got rich.”

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance added: “These defendants executed an old-school pyramid scheme on a new-school platform.”

Ignatov, 33, of Sofia, Bulgaria, was charged with wire fraud conspiracy, and detained after being arrested on Wednesday at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

Ignatova, 38, also of Sofia, was charged with wire fraud, securities fraud and conspiracy. She has been at large since disappeari­ng in Oct. 2017. Lawyers for the siblings could not immediatel­y be located.

According to court papers, the defendants misled investors into believing OneCoin’s value was determined by supply and demand, when it was actually determined internally, and that OneCoins were “mined” using company servers.

The papers also include quotations suggesting the defendants knew OneCoin was a fraud.

Ignatova was quoted as telling a co-founder that “I cheat currently on coins,” and that one possible “exit strategy” was to “take the money and run and blame someone else.”

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