Former Investor Sues OneCoin Scheme, Seeks Class Action

Former OneCoin investor Christine Grablis is suing the cryptocurrency investment scheme for fraud, according to a complaint filed on May 7.

Grablis is seeking damages and a class action suit to represent other investors purportedly defrauded by OneCoin.

The full list of defendants in this lawsuit — Grablis v. OneCoin Ltd. — includes OneCoin Ltd, Ruja Ignatova, Konstantin Ignatov, Sebastian Greenwood, Mark Scott, along with other potential parties who have yet to be named.

According to a Bloomberg report on May 7, OneCoin founder Ruja Ignatova has been charged with wire fraud, securities fraud and money laundering; Konstantin Ignatova, Ruja’s younger brother and purported executive at OneCoin, was charged with wire fraud, securities fraud and money laundering in March.

As noted in the class action complaint, Greenwood is the co-founder and “public face” of OneCoin. Scott, on the other hand, is listed as a licensed attorney, who stands accused of using his legal knowledge to help the firm launder money via hedge funds.

Silver Miller, a law firm which purportedly specializes in representing cryptocurrency investors, has issued a press release instructing potentially affected investors on how they can participate in the class action suit.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, OneCoin was a global Ponzi Scheme that has used smoke and mirrors tactics to maintain an air of legitimacy. The scam used a multi-level marketing scheme to sell education materials for trading that came with tokens that could purportedly be used to mine onecoins.

Victim of $24 Million SIM Swap Case Writes Open Letter to FCC Chairman   Oct. 22, 2019
Abramoff-linked crypto firm says SEC has no case against it   Oct. 21, 2020
Vanbex Founders Sue Former Contractor for False Statements That Firm Was a Scam   May 2, 2019
Italy: Securities Regulator Suspends Two Crypto Firms for Alleged Scam Investment Schemes   Dec. 17, 2018
New York Resident Indicted for Crypto Scam, Charged With Wire Fraud   Nov. 6, 2019