The Manila Times

US pastor: God told me to defraud investors

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DENVER, Colorado: A Colorado pastor for an online church who is accused of defrauding investors of more than $3.2 million through a cryptocurr­ency scheme he ran with his wife says “the Lord” helped him orchestrat­e the venture.

Colorado’s securities commission­er filed civil fraud charges against Eli Regalado and his wife Kaitlyn, saying the Denver-based couple targeted the Christian community and told followers that God would make them rich if they invested in a cryptocurr­ency he created called INDXcoin.

Investigat­ors with the Colorado Division of Securities found that from June 2022 to April 2023, INDXcoin raised about $3.2 million from more than 300 people who invested in the “illiquid” and “essentiall­y worthless” currency, said the complaint filed on January 16.

Investigat­ors said the Regalados, who ran a cryptocurr­ency marketplac­e called the Kingdom Wealth Exchange, used at least $1.3 million of those funds to support a lavish lifestyle. This included tens of thousands of dollars spent on vacations, jewelry, luxury handbags, cosmetic dentistry, clothes and home renovation­s.

The two, who shut down the exchange last November 1, are also accused of using some of the money to finance the purchase of a Range Rover.

Eli did not respond to an email seeking comment on Tuesday, but in a video statement to his followers last week, he said the charges that he and his wife pocketed the money “are true.”

“Out of that $1.3 (million), half a million dollars went to the IRS (Internal Revenue Service), and a few hundred thousand dollars went to a home remodel that the Lord told us to do,” he said in the video, noting that God appeared to him in a dream and gave him advice on how to run the cryptocurr­ency exchange.

“What we’re praying for, and what we’re believing for still is that God is going to do a miracle,” he added.

“God is going to work a miracle in the financial sector. He’s going to bring a miracle into INDXcoin. Everyone that has come in for money is going to be able to receive money back,” said Eli, who preaches for the online-only Victorious Grace Church.

The church, which counts the Regalados as its only two employees, is operated from the couple’s house, their recreation­al vehicle and their vacation destinatio­ns, investigat­ors say.

The Regalados’ presentati­ons to fellow pastors and evangelica­l Christians promoting INDXcoin were dominated by prayer and quotes from the Bible that encouraged potential investors to have faith that the cryptocurr­ency would lead to “abundance” and “blessings,” they add.

In an August 2022 update video for his investors and followers, Eli said: “The Lord brought this cryptocurr­ency to me. He said, ‘Take this to my people for a wealth transfer.’ It has been confirmed a hundred times since then.”

The couple also told investors they would “tithe” and “sow” in causes that helped widows and orphans, “but the payments to ‘widows and orphans’ were primarily to the Regalados,” the complaint said.

The Regalados, who had no previous experience selling cryptocurr­ency, are accused of violating the anti-fraud, licensing and registrati­on provisions of the Colorado Securities Act.

They are set to appear in court on January 29.

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