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Thai SEC Pursues Crypto Promoter as Investors Claim $40M Losses From Online Scheme

source-logo  financemagnates.com 2 h
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Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has confirmed that legal action against cryptocurrency promoter Worawat Narknawdee, also known as “Acme Traderist,” is ongoing. The statement followed renewed public attention after more than 30 alleged victims filed new complaints against him this week.

Complaint Filed With Economic Crime Division

Deputy Secretary-General Anek Yooyuen said the SEC filed a criminal complaint in March 2023 against Mr. Worawat and 1000X Limited, the company operating the website 1000x.live. The pair are accused of running a digital asset trading business without authorisation.

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The case resurfaced publicly on 9 March 2026, when more than 30 alleged victims went to the Central Investigation Bureau to file new complaints over investments linked to the 1000X platform.

This promted renewed media and social media scrutiny and leading the SEC to restate that it had already lodged a criminal complaint against Worawat Narknawdee and 1000X Limited back in March 2023 and that the matter now sits with public prosecutors.

Read more: Thailand Joins Countries That Exempt Crypto Capital Gains Tax, but Only for 5 Years

Victims claim they were persuaded to invest through the platform, with estimated damages totalling 1.39 billion baht. Police believe Mr. Worawat may have left Thailand and travelled to the United Arab Emirates, where he reportedly has other business interests.

SEC Moves to Protect Investors

To prevent further losses, the SEC said it requested the Digital Economy and Society Ministry in June 2025 to block access to the platform. The regulator also urged the public to verify whether a digital asset business is properly licensed before investing.

Thailand’s SEC has brought several similar actions against unlicensed or improperly operating crypto businesses and promoters in the past year. For example, it moved to block access to five unlicensed exchanges including Bybit, CoinEx, OKX, XT.com and 1000X from June 28, 2025, after finding they served Thai users without licences and referred those cases to the Economic Crime Suppression Division.

In January 2026, the SEC also filed criminal complaints against individuals allegedly offering Worldcoin trading services and separate complaints over unauthorised over-the-counter crypto dealing, again citing violations of the Digital Asset Business law.

More recently, in February 2026, the regulator lodged a complaint against a licensed local broker, its overseas platform and executives for allegedly operating an unlicensed exchange targeting Thai customers, underscoring a broader clampdown on cross-border and unlicensed activity.

financemagnates.com