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dubai's alleged crypto scams are ranking in billions

Posted: 08 Jan 2025, 18:52
by Revelations
Ponzi and pyramid schemes dressed in startup clothes have been running rampant in the UAE, experts and US authorities say.

On a scorching July day in Dubai, Sam Lee was inside a climate-controlled wine bar, sipping a glass of chilled red, looking untouchable. Near the beginning of the year, US authorities announced that they’d charged Lee in absentia with conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud. They alleged that, as the co-founder of a company called HyperVerse, he’d orchestrated a cryptocurrency scam that bilked investors around the world for almost $2 billion. HyperVerse had promised returns as high as 1% a day via cutting-edge blockchain-based strategies, but according to the US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission, it was just an old-fashioned Ponzi scheme.

In a series of interviews with Bloomberg Businessweek, Lee, an Australian citizen who’s been living and working in Dubai for the past several years, denied the allegations against him and said any misuse of HyperVerse funds must have been conducted by someone else. “Startups fail,” he said at the wine bar, playfully tilting his glass. “That’s just the nature of business.” Whenever he got a tough question, he paused for a prolonged beat, sometimes cocking a dark eyebrow. US officials had said they were working with counterparts in the United Arab Emirates to hand Lee a summons, but he wasn’t concerned with the US government’s wishes: “They have no evidence, so I don’t have to do anything.”

Re: dubai's alleged crypto scams are ranking in billions

Posted: 08 Jan 2025, 19:02
by Revelations
Crypto startups ousted as Ponzi Schemes by US are thriving in Dubai

Dubai’s alleged crypto scams are raking in billions. Experts and US authorities have raised alarms about the increasing number of Ponzi and pyramid schemes in the UAE, often disguised as legitimate startups.

Experts argue that over the last decade, Dubai has quietly become a hotbed for a type of crypto scamming that has gone unreported in the shadow of crises at FTX and Binance.

According to US and international authorities, the other wave of enterprises isn’t only squandering client money, like Sam Bankman-Fried, or breaking anti-money-laundering regulations, like Changpeng Zhao.

Unlike FTX and Binance, these other companies allegedly deceive investors into handing over money for digital currencies that they may easily alter or never create. They create sparkling investment platforms and promise enticing returns that they support with capital from newer markets until the schemes collapse under their own weight, possibly a few months later, according to prosecutors.

Dubai’s biggest fraudsters – Details

As Dubai attempted to attract crypto companies in the 2010s, it is believed that scammers also established operations there.

Ruja Ignatova, a Bulgarian émigré, operated OneCoin Ltd. from Dubai between 2015 and 2017. According to US authorities, this was one of the largest fraud schemes ever perpetrated. Ruja Ignatova was included in the FBI’s ten most wanted fugitives list. One of her co-founders has pleaded guilty to fraud.

In another instance, after co-founding the Bitcoin-mining operation, Blockchain Global, Sam Lee relocated to Dubai in 2021 at the age of 32. He solicited individual investments from individuals in Australia, and the company collapsed and entered receivership, with creditors owed $38 million.

According to reports, the US authorities announced at the beginning of the year that they had charged Sam Lee, who was in Dubai, with conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud in absentia. They claimed that, as the co-founder of HyperVerse, he had orchestrated a crypto scheme that defrauded investors worldwide for nearly $2 billion.

The US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have determined that HyperVerse was a traditional Ponzi scheme, despite its assertion that it would generate returns as high as 1% per day through innovative blockchain-based strategies.

Sam Lee denied the accusations against him and insisted that any misuse of HyperVerse funds must have been attributed to another individual.


Photo of Sam Lee, the HyperVerse founder accused of fraud by United States authorities. Source: Bloomberg

Lee then publicly stated that he was merely a “tech provider” and not the mastermind behind HyperVerse. He also attributed the company’s collapse to the mysterious new owners. Authorities in the United States disagreed.

Between 2021 and early 2024, the FTC received 200 HyperVerse complaints. Users from the US and dozens of other countries stated that the company cost them up to $200,000.

t included Rupert Honywood, a 67-year-old who was so impressed by HyperVerse’s promise that he sold the property he lived in with his wife and sent over £130,000 ($165,000) of their money to Lee’s organization.

Sam Lee also introduced Vidilook, a platform that compensated users for viewing advertisements after they paid an initial subscription charge. After a few months, Vidilook discontinued allowing users to withdraw their funds, and several individuals began to express their concerns.

California regulators also issued a refraining order to his investment company, We Are All Satoshi, in late 2023, describing it as a pyramid and Ponzi scheme.

We Are All Satoshi states that the California allegation is outdated due to Lee’s departure from the company, although it also maintains that its business model remains unchanged. Vidilook has ended its operations.

UAE regulatory blindspots

To become the crypto industry’s global capital, Dubai has kept its crypto rules permissive as other countries tighten them. International authorities and public documents suggest it is home to a crypto scammer community.

The Financial Action Task Force placed the country on its “gray list” of countries that fail to combat illicit funds in 2022. Since February, it has worked to remove itself from the list and enhance its image through the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA). So far, the largest fine the agency has issued was to the unlicensed crypto exchange OPNX, sanctioned $2.7 million.

Some countries tried to restrict Binance Holdings Ltd. from operating locally this spring after a $4 billion settlement with US authorities over money laundering and sanctions violations. VARA walked the opposite lane, granting the exchange a new license.

In February, the International Financial Action Task Force removed the UAE from its “gray list.” However, two months later, Transparency International, a good-government charity, stated that the Government had done little to dissuade fraud between its inclusion on the list and removal.

The UAE was told that it must continue to combat high-risk money laundering when it was removed from the gray list and continues to be subject to monitoring.

According to Utzke, a former IRS investigator, Dubai authorities have continued to prioritize economic interests. “They want to appear tough on crime,” he claims, “but they also want to be at the forefront of innovation.”

Re: dubai's alleged crypto scams are ranking in billions

Posted: 08 Jan 2025, 19:07
by Union
Crypto in general is fraud

Re: dubai's alleged crypto scams are ranking in billions

Posted: 08 Jan 2025, 20:55
by Mesob
Lots of Eritreans, Ethiopians and Somalis lost millions on this scum. Most of the Eritrean Shaebia elements who lost followed a Shaebia dog, an ethnic Blen named Georgio. This guy was advertising and recruiting for Hyperverse.
The only lucky unscathed retired old man was Wedi Arawit, the Arab Abid Concubine, because he lost all his meager income on a cheap Vodka and a Portuguese Vermouth.
Revelations wrote:
08 Jan 2025, 19:02
Crypto startups ousted as Ponzi Schemes by US are thriving in Dubai

Dubai’s alleged crypto scams are raking in billions. Experts and US authorities have raised alarms about the increasing number of Ponzi and pyramid schemes in the UAE, often disguised as legitimate startups.

Experts argue that over the last decade, Dubai has quietly become a hotbed for a type of crypto scamming that has gone unreported in the shadow of crises at FTX and Binance.

According to US and international authorities, the other wave of enterprises isn’t only squandering client money, like Sam Bankman-Fried, or breaking anti-money-laundering regulations, like Changpeng Zhao.

Unlike FTX and Binance, these other companies allegedly deceive investors into handing over money for digital currencies that they may easily alter or never create. They create sparkling investment platforms and promise enticing returns that they support with capital from newer markets until the schemes collapse under their own weight, possibly a few months later, according to prosecutors.

Dubai’s biggest fraudsters – Details

As Dubai attempted to attract crypto companies in the 2010s, it is believed that scammers also established operations there.

Ruja Ignatova, a Bulgarian émigré, operated OneCoin Ltd. from Dubai between 2015 and 2017. According to US authorities, this was one of the largest fraud schemes ever perpetrated. Ruja Ignatova was included in the FBI’s ten most wanted fugitives list. One of her co-founders has pleaded guilty to fraud.

In another instance, after co-founding the Bitcoin-mining operation, Blockchain Global, Sam Lee relocated to Dubai in 2021 at the age of 32. He solicited individual investments from individuals in Australia, and the company collapsed and entered receivership, with creditors owed $38 million.

According to reports, the US authorities announced at the beginning of the year that they had charged Sam Lee, who was in Dubai, with conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud in absentia. They claimed that, as the co-founder of HyperVerse, he had orchestrated a crypto scheme that defrauded investors worldwide for nearly $2 billion.

The US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have determined that HyperVerse was a traditional Ponzi scheme, despite its assertion that it would generate returns as high as 1% per day through innovative blockchain-based strategies.

Sam Lee denied the accusations against him and insisted that any misuse of HyperVerse funds must have been attributed to another individual.


Photo of Sam Lee, the HyperVerse founder accused of fraud by United States authorities. Source: Bloomberg

Lee then publicly stated that he was merely a “tech provider” and not the mastermind behind HyperVerse. He also attributed the company’s collapse to the mysterious new owners. Authorities in the United States disagreed.

Between 2021 and early 2024, the FTC received 200 HyperVerse complaints. Users from the US and dozens of other countries stated that the company cost them up to $200,000.

t included Rupert Honywood, a 67-year-old who was so impressed by HyperVerse’s promise that he sold the property he lived in with his wife and sent over £130,000 ($165,000) of their money to Lee’s organization.

Sam Lee also introduced Vidilook, a platform that compensated users for viewing advertisements after they paid an initial subscription charge. After a few months, Vidilook discontinued allowing users to withdraw their funds, and several individuals began to express their concerns.

California regulators also issued a refraining order to his investment company, We Are All Satoshi, in late 2023, describing it as a pyramid and Ponzi scheme.

We Are All Satoshi states that the California allegation is outdated due to Lee’s departure from the company, although it also maintains that its business model remains unchanged. Vidilook has ended its operations.

UAE regulatory blindspots

To become the crypto industry’s global capital, Dubai has kept its crypto rules permissive as other countries tighten them. International authorities and public documents suggest it is home to a crypto scammer community.

The Financial Action Task Force placed the country on its “gray list” of countries that fail to combat illicit funds in 2022. Since February, it has worked to remove itself from the list and enhance its image through the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA). So far, the largest fine the agency has issued was to the unlicensed crypto exchange OPNX, sanctioned $2.7 million.

Some countries tried to restrict Binance Holdings Ltd. from operating locally this spring after a $4 billion settlement with US authorities over money laundering and sanctions violations. VARA walked the opposite lane, granting the exchange a new license.

In February, the International Financial Action Task Force removed the UAE from its “gray list.” However, two months later, Transparency International, a good-government charity, stated that the Government had done little to dissuade fraud between its inclusion on the list and removal.

The UAE was told that it must continue to combat high-risk money laundering when it was removed from the gray list and continues to be subject to monitoring.

According to Utzke, a former IRS investigator, Dubai authorities have continued to prioritize economic interests. “They want to appear tough on crime,” he claims, “but they also want to be at the forefront of innovation.”