Springfield News-Sun

Dozens held for alleged cryptocurr­ency fraud

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ISTANBUL — Turkish police have detained 62 people as part of an investigat­ion into a cryptocurr­ency exchange that is being accused of defrauding investors, according to the country’s staterun news agency.

Anadolu news agency said Friday prosecutor­s issued detention warrants for 16 more people linked to the Thodex cryptocurr­ency exchange and said the detentions took place in eight provinces.

On Thursday, Istanbul’s chief prosecutor’s office announced it was probing Thodex following complaints from users who could not access their assets. It is thought to have affected some 391,000 investors and an estimated $2 billion in investment­s.

Thodex owner Faruk Fatih Ozer denied the allegation­s in a statement on Twitter and said the company was being targeted by a smear campaign. He said the company temporaril­y shut down trading after accounts showed unusual activity due to a cyberattac­k. Ozer also said the claims that the money had disappeare­d were untrue.

The justice ministry said it was seeking Ozer’s extraditio­n from Albania, according to Anadolu, after Turkish media reports said he had left the country earlier this week. Ozer confirmed he was abroad but claimed the trip was to meet foreign investors.

Last week, Turkey’s central bank announced that it was banning the use of cryptocurr­encies for the payment for goods, arguing that they presented “irrevocabl­e” risks.

The decision came as many in Turkey have turned to cryptocurr­encies to shield their savings from rising inflation and the Turkish currency’s slump.

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