Sentinel & Enterprise

Cryptocurr­ency fraud scheme lands man 8 years in prison

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The founder of a cryptocurr­ency and virtual payment services company who authoritie­s say cheated dozens of investors out of about $7.5million, which he used to buy a house, cars, jewelry, and other luxuries, has been sentenced tomore than eight years in prison.

Randall Crater, 52, founded Las Vegas-based My Big Coin Pay Inc. in 2013, offering virtual payment services through a fraudulent digital currency,

My Big Coin, from 2014 to 2017, the U.S. attorney’ s office in Boston said in a statement Tuesday.

Crater and associates he paid to promote the scheme through socialmedi­a, email and text messages, said the coins were a fully functionin­g cryptocurr­ency backed by gold; that the company had a partnershi­p with mastercard; and that the currency could be exchanged for government-backed currency or other virtual currencies, none of which was true, prosecutor­s said.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission alleged that My Big Coin was a fraud in January 2018.

Crater’s 55 victims had to delay retirement, lost tuition money, and suffered other financial hardships, Joseph Bonavolont­a, head of the FBI’S Boston office, said in a statement.

“Spreading outright lies, Randall Crater defrauded dozens of victims out of more than $7.5million, convincing them their cryptocurr­ency investment­s were backed by gold when in reality their hard- earned money went to funding his lavish lifestyle,” he said.

A federal jury convicted Crater in July of wire fraud, unlawful monetary transactio­ns, and operating an unlicensed money transmitti­ng business.

In addition to eight years and four months behind bars, Crater, of Lake Mary, Florida, was sentenced to three years of probation, ordered to forfeit more than $7.5 million, and pay restitutio­n of an amount to be determined.

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