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Airbit Club Founders, Lawyer Plead Guilty to $100M Fraud Scheme

source-logo  coindesk.com  + 4 more 08 March 2023 22:18, UTC

Six executives of the global cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme Airbit Club have pleaded guilty to their roles in the global fraud and money laundering scheme that prosecutors say defrauded victims out of a collective $100 million.

Pablo Renato Rodriguez, one of the co-founders of Airbit Club, pleaded guilty on Wednesday. Co-founder Gutemberg Dos Santos pleaded guilty in October 2021 after being extradited to the U.S. from his native country of Panama in November 2020. Three promoters – Cecilia Millan, Karina Chairez, and Jackie Aguilar – pleaded guilty earlier this year. Scott Hughes, an attorney who helped Rodriguez and Dos Santos launder money, pleaded guilty on March 2.

Airbit Club was a global scam in which promoters hosted “lavish expos” and community presentations throughout the U.S., Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe, and convinced victims to invest in “memberships” that purported to yield returns generated through bitcoin mining and trading. Victims could view their “balances” on an online portal but the numbers were fake and they could not withdraw funds.

According to prosecutors, victims’ funds were instead spent on enriching the club’s founders and promoters, who spent the money on “cars, jewelry and luxury homes” as well as “more extravagant expos to recruit more victims.”

All six pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy and bank fraud conspiracy.

Though none have been sentenced yet, each could face a maximum sentence of 70 years in prison. As part of their guilty plea, the defendants must forfeit their ill-gotten gains, including U.S. currency, bitcoin and real estate valued at a collective $100 million.

coindesk.com

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