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Writer's pictureIshita Bora

HashFlare Founders Arrested In Estonia For $575M Crypto Fraud Conspiracy



Reports said that the two founders of the now-defunct Bitcoin cloud miner HashFlare have been arrested in Estonia over their alleged involvement in a $575 million crypto fraud conspiracy.


It has been reported that HashFlare was a cloud mining company created in 2015, which purported to allow customers to lease the company’s hashing power in order to mine cryptocurrencies and gain an equivalent share of its profits. The company was seen as one of the leading names in the business at the time but shut down a large portion of its mining operations in July 2018.


However, according to a statement from the United States Department of Justice citing court documents, the entire mining operation, run by founders Sergei Potapenko and Ivan Turõgin, was part of a “multi-faceted scheme” that “defrauded hundreds of thousands of victims.”


The report said that this included convincing victims to enter into “fraudulent equipment rental contracts” through HashFlare and persuading other victims to invest in a fake digital currency bank called Polybius Bank. The pair is also accused of conspiring to launder their “criminal proceeds” through 75 properties, six luxury vehicles, cryptocurrency wallets, and thousands of cryptocurrency mining machines.


US Attorney Nick Brown for the Western District of Washington called the size and scope of the alleged scheme “truly astounding.”


He said:

“These defendants capitalized on both the allure of cryptocurrency and the mystery surrounding cryptocurrency mining, to commit an enormous Ponzi scheme.”

Likewise, the HashFlare founders have been charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, 16 counts of wire fraud, and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering using shell companies and fraudulent invoices and contracts. They could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted.


HashFlares’ parent company HashCoins OU was founded by Potapenko and Turõgin in 2013, while HashFlare launched mining services in 2015. It initially offered contracts for SHA-256 Bitcoin and scrypt. ETHASH Ether, Dash, and Zcash options soon followed.


According to the indictment, the pair claimed HashFlare was a “massive cryptomining operation.” It’s alleged the company was mining at a rate of less than 1% of what it claimed and was paying out withdrawals by purchasing Bitcoin from third parties rather than gains from mining operations. By July 2018, HashFlare announced a halt to BTC mining services, citing difficulty generating revenue amid market fluctuations.


Thus, customers were not reimbursed for the remainder of the annual contract fees, which they had paid upfront. Other crypto assets available in the platform's portfolio continued to operate as normal. Allegations of the company being fraudulent were made but never proven in an official capacity.


Source: Cointelegraph


 

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