Bu makaleyi paylaş

OmegaPro Co-Founder Arrested in Turkey on Suspicion of $4B Ponzi Scheme: Reports

The firm said it invested in cryptocurrency and forex, and reportedly collapsed in 2022.

Güncellendi 22 Ağu 2024 ös 3:22 Yayınlandı 22 Ağu 2024 ös 3:19 AI tarafından çevrildi
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)
  • Andreas Szakacs, a co-founder of OmegaPro, alleged to be a cryptocurrency-related scam, was arrested in Turkey in July, Turkish media reported.
  • Turkish authorities seized cold wallets and computers and tracked $160 million of cryptocurrency movements, the reports said.

Andreas Szakacs, a co-founder of OmegaPro, was arrested in Turkey in July for his involvement with the company alleged to have scammed investors of $4 billion in a cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme, Turkish media reported Thursday.

Szakacs, a Swede, changed his name to Emre Avci after becoming a citizen of the country, Turkey Today said. He rejected the accusations and said he worked in finance and marketing, according to BirGün, an Istanbul-based daily.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Başka bir hikayeyi kaçırmayın.Bugün State of Crypto Bültenine abone olun. Tüm bültenleri gör

The gendarmerie seized computers and 32 cold wallets, according to behindmlm.com. While Szakacs did not provide passwords for the devices, Turkish authorities were able to track $160 million of cryptocurrency movements, BirGün said.

Reklam

OmegaPro reportedly collapsed in late 2022, around the time the FTX crypto empire crashed. Prior to that, countries including France, Belgium Spain and Argentina sent out regulatory fraud warnings about the company, behindmlm.com reported at the time. OmegaPro did not target U.S. customers, it said.

The arrest followed a June 28 tip-off from an anonymous informant.

A Dutch national, Abdul Ghaffar Mohaghegh, gave a statement to the gendarmerie saying he'd lost $7 million in the scheme and claimed to have power of attorney from 3,000 of the affected investors who had collectively lost $103 million.

According to Turkey Today, Szakacs was arrested on July 9 after raids were conducted at two villas in Beykoz, Istanbul. BirGün said the arrest for "fraud by using information systems, banks or credit institutions as a tool" occurred on July 10.

Read More: Turkey Takes Crypto Bill to Parliament, Aims to Bring Crypto Licensing to the Country

CORRECTION (Aug 22, 15:20 UTC): Corrects figure in headline to $4B


Lebih untuk Anda

BitSeek: Decentralized AI Infrastructure Revolutionizing the Web3 Industry

Lebih untuk Anda

tr check UAT

dd