The FBI created a fake cryptocurrency to identify 18 fraudulent crypto actors in a recent mass fraud arrest.
The FBI brought criminal charges against 18 individuals and entities for engaging in fraudulent crypto activities and market manipulation through the use of its own fake cryptocurrency. As part of “Operation Token Mirrors,” FBI agents created a fake cryptocurrency token, NexFundAI, to expose deceptive trading practices like wash trading and pump-and-dump schemes.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts announced the charges, which target leaders of four cryptocurrency companies and four financial services firms acting as market makers.
These firms, including ZM Quant, CLS Global, MyTrade, and Gotbit, allegedly manipulated token prices, tricking investors into buying at inflated rates. The scheme resulted in the seizure of $25 million in cryptocurrency, and several wash trading bots were deactivated, according to the FBI.
One of the critical components of this operation was the creation of NexFundAI, an Ethereum-based cryptocurrency designed to ensnare market manipulators. Jodi Cohen, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Boston Field Office, described this as an “unprecedented step.”
Despite being a tool for law enforcement, NexFundAI continues to trade. It currently boasts a market cap of $177,000 and has experienced a 5,000% surge in trading volume to $3.5 million over the past 24 hours, according to DEX Screener data.
The investigation revealed that the accused firms fabricated trading activity and made false claims about their tokens to lure new investors, contributing to the tokens’ inflated values, according to the FBI.
“This investigation, the first of its kind, identified numerous fraudsters in the cryptocurrency industry. Wash trading has long been outlawed in the financial markets, and cryptocurrency is no exception.”
Acting United States Attorney Joshua Levy
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FBI’s Operation Token Mirrors
As part of its investigation, the FBI created the fake cryptocurrency to identify and disrupt fraudulent activity. ZM Quant, CLS Global, and MyTrade were charged with executing wash trades on behalf of the fake token, while Gotbit and its leadership were charged with similar schemes.
The defendants are accused of fabricating trading activity and making false claims about their tokens to attract new investors. By engaging in deceptive tactics such as wash trades, they allegedly inflated the tokens’ prices and then sold them off for profit in pump-and-dump schemes.
Notably, Saitama, the largest of these companies, reportedly reached a market value in the billions at one stage, according to the FBI.
The fraudulent trades artificially inflated token prices, allowing the defendants to profit by selling at those elevated levels. Five defendants have pleaded guilty or agreed to do so, and authorities have arrested additional suspects in Texas, the United Kingdom, and Portugal.
The SEC has filed civil complaints against several of the firms involved.
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