Call & Times

Rhode Island man gets 3 years for cryptocurr­ency fraud

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— A 25-yearold Rhode Island man who federal prosecutor­s say defrauded more than 170 people who poured millions of dollars into his cryptocurr­ency investment business was sentenced in New York City on Wednesday to more than three years in prison and ordered to pay more than $2.8 million in restitutio­n.

Jeremy Spence, of Bristol, Rhode Island, solicited more than $5 million in investment­s through false representa­tions, including bogus statements showing his cryptocurr­ency trading was very profitable when in fact it consistent­ly lost money, Damian Williams, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement.

As he lost money, Spence used new investor funds to pay other investors in a Ponzi-like scheme, Williams said. In total, Spence distribute­d about $2 million worth of cryptocurr­ency to investors using funds previously deposited by other investors, prosecutor­s said.

Spence, who previously pleaded guilty to a felony fraud charge, was sentenced to 42 months in prison by U.S District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan.

Spence’s lawyers, Sylvie Levine and Neil Kelly of the Federal Defenders of New York, said in court documents that Spence committed the crimes when he was 21 and 22 years old, the result of getting “in over his head” with the crypto business.

“The money wasn’t stolen or secreted away; it was lost in new, unregulate­d, volatile markets after it was entrusted to a 21-year-old college drop-out who should never have had that much responsibi­lity in the first place,” they wrote. “In the real world, in traditiona­l markets, no company would ever have entrusted him with that level of responsibi­lity.”

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