Springfield News-Sun

Columbus-area man accused of defrauding investors of at least $10M in Ponzi-like cryptocurr­ency scheme

- By Jordan Laird

The FBI and federal prosecutor­s are accusing a New Albany man of passing himself off as an expert cryptocurr­ency trader while defrauding investors of at least $10 million.

Authoritie­s arrested Rathnakish­ore Giri, 27, on Nov. 18 after a grand jury indicted him on five counts of wire fraud, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. He is set to be arraigned Dec. 2 in U.S. District Court in Columbus.

If convicted, Giri faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison on each count.

The indictment alleges that beginning in August 2020, Giri misled investors to believe he was a highly successful specialist in trading bitcoin derivative­s and falsely promised them that he would invest their money in cryptocurr­ency, make them a lot of money and repay their principal investment amount.

Giri solicited investment­s directly and through his two companies, NBD Eidetic Capital and SR Private Equity LLC, according to court documents.

Instead of putting all the investor funds into cryptocurr­ency, authoritie­s allege Giri diverted some of the money to pay his own expenses or repay earlier investors — a hallmark of an unlawful Ponzi scheme, according to court documents.

Investors typically gave Giri between $2,000 and $300,000, but some individual­s gave Giri more than $2 million to invest, according to court documents.

Giri repeatedly lost investors’ principal investment­s, and when they tried to cash out he would lie to them to delay their withdrawal­s, court documents state.

In June 2021, court documents state Giri told an NBD employee in a text that “(investor)’s lawyer thinks this is a Ponzi scheme. Lol.” That investor had invested $800,000 with NBD, documents state.

Giri told one investor that their funds would be pooled with that of other investors, court documents state. When the investor asked for a breakdown of the pool, Giri admitted in a text to another individual that he created a fake spreadshee­t of made-up names to give them, according to court documents. That investor was actually an undercover law enforcemen­t agent.

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