FBI arrests 24-year-old crypto trader for commodities and wire fraud

Published at: Jan. 26, 2021

United States authorities have brought criminal charges against a crypto trader whom they say defrauded investors out of over $5 million. 

The Department of Justice announced on Tuesday that it had arrested Jeremy Spence. Between 2017 and 2019, 24-year-old Spence operated a crypto investment scheme under the name "Coin Signals," primarily via Twitter and Discord.

The announcement quoted Federal Bureau of Investigation Assistant Director-in-Charge William Sweeney as saying:

“As alleged, Jeremy Spence misrepresented the success of his investment platform in order to entice people to send money his way. Because his trading was less than profitable and significantly less successful than he represented to investors, he used money from new investors to pay off others in order to keep his plan moving — a typical marker of a Ponzi scheme.

The criminal complaint unveiled alongside the announcement further explained that Spence had claimed to be conducting highly lucrative trades via crypto exchange BitMEX, whose leadership was arrested in October 2020 on charges of facilitating money laundering. The FBI alleges that Spence deceived investors with claims of using BitMEX's perpetual contracts to achieve high rates of return. 

In November 2018, while Spence was falsifying evidence of roughly 1,000 BTC in his fund, it never exceeded 11 BTC, the authorities say. Spence faces 10 years in prison for commodities fraud and 20 years for wire fraud. 

Though these are criminal charges from the DoJ, the announcement thanks the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for its help with the investigation. In recent years, the CFTC has been working to scale up its ability to identify unregistered or illegal investment schemes based on crypto derivatives. That has largely depended on new analytics platforms that can sift through parts of the web that traditional CFTC investigators are still trying to familiarize themselves with. 

Tags
Fbi
Related Posts
Update: "Coin Signals" trader also faces charges from the CFTC
For Jeremy Spence, also known as "Coin Signals," the news just gets worse. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has unveiled civil fraud charges against Spence for his investment scheme, which allegedly suckered investors out of over $5 million worth of Bitcoin (BTC) based on false or misleading statements. As Cointelegraph reported, the Department of Justice arrested Spence earlier today on charges of wire fraud and commodities fraud that have maximum sentences of up to 30 years combined. The CFTC's civil complaint looks to return Spence's allegedly ill-gotten gains back to investors and to bar Spence from trading in commodity interest …
Regulation / Jan. 26, 2021
BitMEX turns to Chainalysis to solve legal woes, or at least soften the CFTC's blow
Still facing a courtroom assault in the U.S. for allegedly facilitating money laundering, BitMex is trying to show regulators that it's trying. On Jan. 12, the legally besieged crypto exchange released a blog post advertising further work with blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis. BitMex said its aim was "to identify, investigate, and stop illicit transactions." Chainalysis is known as a go-to solution for government entities looking to track crypto transactions. The firm has been instrumental to the Department of Justice's seizures of cryptocurrency, including over $1 billion in Bitcoin and its offshoots from an unnamed Silk Road hacker, as well as …
Regulation / Jan. 13, 2021
DJ Khaled and Floyd Mayweather promoted his 2017 ICO; Now, he faces a year behind bars
A Manhattan court has sentenced the operator of the fraudulent crypto investment firm Centra Tech to a year and a day in prison. Per a Tuesday announcement from the Department of Justice, Robert Farkas successfully solicited $25 million in investment during the 2017 initial coin offering boom. The ICO famously included promotion from boxer Floyd Mayweather and musician DJ Khaled, both of whom got in legal trouble for failing to disclose that they were paid for their participation. On top of the celebrity endorsements, Farkas' scheme included lies about Centra Tech's licensing as a money services business in 38 states, …
Regulation / Dec. 15, 2020
BitMEX operator hires chief compliance officer amid US criminal charges
The operator of crypto derivatives exchange BitMEX, 100x Group, has hired a seasoned Anti-Money Laundering (AML) specialist, Malcolm Wright, as its chief compliance officer. In an announcement on Oct. 12, the 100x emphasized Wright's profile as the current chairman of the Advisory Council and AML Working Group at Global Digital Finance, and as a speaker covering key topics that include the Financial Action Task Force's Recommendations for Virtual Asset Service Providers. 100X Group had last week reshuffled its top leadership, removing BitMEX's co-founders Arthur Hayes, Samuel Reed and Ben Delo from executive roles. Hayes, Reed and Delo were all charged …
Regulation / Oct. 12, 2020
Law Decoded: The year of the Crypto Futures Trading Commission, Sept. 25–Oct. 2
Every Friday, Law Decoded delivers analysis on the week’s critical stories in the realms of policy, regulation and law. Editor's note In a tweet late last night, President Trump said that he and Melania had tested positive for COVID-19. If you weren’t already aware of that, you may want to catch up on a deluge of wishes for life and death, alongside speculation as to Trump’s announcement being a hoax, before sitting down to this week’s Law Decoded. Or possibly not. Every week leading up to the presidential election features more amplified headlines. Law Decoded is likely not the ideal …
Regulation / Oct. 2, 2020