According to CryptoPotato, Rashawn Russell, a former investment banker, has been sentenced to 41 months in prison for wire fraud related to a cryptocurrency scheme and access device fraud. The sentencing took place at the Eastern New York District Court in Brooklyn following Russell's guilty plea in September 2023.

Russell began soliciting investments for his R3 Crypto Fund in November 2020, targeting friends, former college classmates, and co-workers. He promised some investors a 25% return, while suggesting to others that they could earn up to 100%. Using his background as a former investment banker and registered broker, Russell convinced investors of the scheme's legitimacy. He is alleged to have fabricated documents, including altered bank website images and fake bank wire transfer confirmations, to mislead investors about their investment status. Russell used some of the funds to repay earlier investors and diverted significant amounts for personal expenses and gambling. The scheme continued until August 2022, with Russell's arrest taking place in April 2023.

In addition to the cryptocurrency fraud, Russell faces charges for acquiring nearly 100 credit and debit cards under other people's names between September 2021 and June 2023, allegedly intending to use them for fraudulent transactions. The Department of Justice (DOJ) estimates that Russell's cryptocurrency fraud scheme resulted in approximately $1.5 million in investor losses. Consequently, he was ordered to pay over $1.5 million in restitution to his victims. After his arrest, Russell was initially placed on home detention, but his bail was revoked in February 2024 due to continued identity theft activities.

The sentencing of Russell is part of a broader DOJ crackdown on cryptocurrency fraudsters, which has resulted in numerous arrests. In May, Thomas John Sfraga pleaded guilty to wire fraud involving a nonexistent crypto wallet and other schemes. On the same day, two individuals were arrested on seven counts of money laundering and international money laundering related to a pig-butchering cryptocurrency scam worth over $73 million. Earlier in the same month, the DOJ charged brothers Anton Peraire-Bueno and James Pepaire-Bueno with exploiting the Ethereum blockchain to siphon off $25 million in cryptocurrency within 12 seconds. In April, a former software engineer was convicted for illegally obtaining over $12 million in cryptocurrency by exploiting vulnerabilities in the smart contracts of Nirvana Finance and another exchange based on the Solana currency.