Bitcoin Scammer Hit With $2.5 Million Fine for Ponzi Scheme that Promised Outrageous Returns

Fri Oct 19 2018
Mark Cooper (3174 articles)
Bitcoin Scammer Hit With $2.5 Million Fine for Ponzi Scheme that Promised Outrageous Returns

Nicholas Gelfman claimed to have a high-frequency trading computer program that could mine profits from Bitcoin, saying that his clients typically earned “7-11% monthly return on their Bitcoins.” He collected more than $ 600,000 from at least 80 eager investors from 2014 to 2016.

The only problem? Gelfman and his Staten Island-based Gelfman Blueprint Inc. presented fake performance reports to investors and paid some of them using other investors’ money—the hallmark of a Ponzi scheme.

Now Gelfman has been ordered to pay $ 2.5 million in fines and restitution, the Wall Street Journal reports. It’s the first Bitcoin-related fraud case for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

In the settlement, Gelfman admitted to the charges against him and his firm and agreed not to appeal the decision by the Southern District of New York. The CFTC said Gelfman’s victims may not receive restitution because he doesn’t have sufficient funds.

We’re likely to see more Bitcoin fraud cases prosecuted in the years to come. Cryptocurrencies and the underlying blockchain technology have the potential to reshape global business, but concerns include volatility and the potential for money laundering and other crimes. Some traditional finance experts, including Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital and Jim Yong Kim of the World Bank, say cryptocurrencies in and of themselves are pyramid schemes.

“In terms of using Bitcoin or some of the cryptocurrencies, we are also looking at it, but I’m told the vast majority of cryptocurrencies are basically Ponzi schemes,” Kim said in February. “It’s still not really clear how it’s going to work.”

Mark Cooper

Mark Cooper

Mark Cooper is Political / Stock Market Correspondent. He has been covering Global Stock Markets for more than 6 years.