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This article was published on December 11, 2019

This $722M Bitcoin mining scam referred to its marks as ‘dumb’ investors and ‘sheep’


This $722M Bitcoin mining scam referred to its marks as ‘dumb’ investors and ‘sheep’

Authorities in the US have arrested three men in connection with BitClub Network, a Bitcoin mining scheme that allegedly defrauded investors out of a staggering $722 million.

According to a release issued by the US Department of Justice, Matthew Brent Goettsche and Jobadiah Sinclair Weeks — both from Colorado — have been charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

They’re also charged, alongside Joseph Frank Abel from California, with offering and selling unregistered securities.

Goettsche reportedly told his conspirators that their target audience would be “dumb” investors. He also allegedly referred to them as “sheep,” and said he was “building this whole model on the backs of idiots.”

In September 2017, he sent an email to another conspirator in which he suggested that BitClub Network “[d]rop mining earnings significantly starting now” so that he could “retire RAF!!! (rich as fuck).”

“The indictment describes the defendants’ use of the complex world of cryptocurrency to take advantage of unsuspecting investors,” US Attorney Craig Carpenito said.

“What they allegedly did amounts to little more than a modern, high-tech Ponzi scheme that defrauded victims of hundreds of millions of dollars. Working with our law enforcement partners here and across the country, we will ensure that these scammers are held to account for their crimes,” Carpenito added.

Authorities accused the men of deploying elaborate tactics to lure thousands of victims with promises of large returns on their investments in a Bitcoin mining pool.

This allegedly led BitClub to generate hundreds of millions of dollars by recruiting new investors over several years and spent their victims’ money.

The details

Documents shared in court allege that from April 2014 through to December 2019, the defendants operated BitClub Network, a fraudulent scheme that enticed users to invest in exchange for shares of purported cryptocurrency mining pools and rewarded investors for recruiting new participants.

Goettsche, Weeks, Abel, and others also conspired to sell BitClub Network shares — which were securities — but failed to register them with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Weeks and Abel produced videos and traveled across the world to promote BitClub Network. In one video, a conspirator said BitClub Network was “the most transparent company in the history of the world that I’ve ever seen.” In another video, Abel told investors that BitClub Network was “too big to fail.”

The wire fraud conspiracy charge carries a maximum potential penalty of 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

The conspiracy to sell unregistered securities charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine up to $250,000.

Goettsche was arrested in Colorado, Weeks in Florida, and Abel in California. The men are scheduled to have their initial appearances in the districts of their arrests, but it’s worth noting that two defendants are still at large and their identities are under seal.

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