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BitConnect founder indicted in $2.4B Ponzi scheme has disappeared, SEC says

The indicted founder of crypto trading platform BitConnect h🧜as gone off the grid – leaving federal officials unable to formally serve him with a lawsuit in connection to an alleged $2.4 billion Ponzi scheme, according to a court filing.

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed suit last year against Satish Kumbhani, a 36-year-old citizen and resident of India, for allegedly bilking investors into funding the platform. And last 🔯week, the Justice Department indicted Kumbhani on various federal charges, including fraud and money laundering.

But SEC officials did not know Kumbhani’s exact whereabouts and attempts to find him have been unsuc෴cessful, attorneys for the agency told a New York judge in a court filing this week. Since BitConnect is an unincorporated entity, the SEC has to personally serve him with the lawsuit.

The SEC learned last October that 🌌“Kumbhani has ꧑likely relocated from India to an unknown address in a different foreign country,”

“Since November, the Commission has been cons🎶ulting with that country’s financial regulatory authorities in an attempt to locate Kumbhani’s address,” the filing🍰 added. “At present, however, Kumbhani’s location remains unknown, and the Commission remains unable to state when its efforts to locate him will be successful, if at all.”

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The Justice Department alleges BitConnect operated as a “textbook Ponzi scheme.” Shutterstock

The federal judge granted the𝓰 SEC’s request for a 90-day extension while the agency attempts to locate Kumbhani and serve him with the lawsuit if he is found within the US, . The civil lawsuit against the BitConnect founder is currently on hold while the criminal case proceeds.

The SEC’s la💫wsuit is attempting to recover money for burned investors and impose fines on Kumbhani and his co-conspirators.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department alleges B🌟itConnect operated as a “textbook Ponzi scheme.”

Prosecutors say Kumbhani and his associates claimed BitConnect’s “lending program” – which had investors exchange bitcoin for the platform’s own crypto token – would use “purported proprietary technology” that would guarantee investors profits through trades in the global cryptocurrency market.

Instead, the𝓀 company’s finances tꦚanked and it shut down for good in 2018.

“The indictment alleges that in reality, the purported technologies generated no such ꧃profits, and merely functioned as a cover for the Ponzi scheme. In sum, earlier BitConnect investors were paid with money from later investors to promote the fraudulent scheme,” the Justice Department said in a release.