Blockchain & Cryptocurrency
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Cryptocurrency Fraud
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Do Hyeong Kwon Extradited to US For Allegedly Defrauding Investors Out of Billions
U.S. authorities said the co-founder and former CEO of Terraform Labs, Do Hyeong Kwon, was extradited from Montenergro and appeared in a Manhattan federal courtroom Thursday for allegedly engaging in multiple schemes to deceive investors while fraudulently inflating the value of the firm’s cryptocurrencies.
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Attorney General Merrick Garland said the South Korean national will be held accountable for carrying out a series of “elaborate schemes involving Terraform’s cryptocurrencies, which resulted in over $40 billion in investor losses.” A nine-count superseding indictment includes allegations of commodities, securities and wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy.
Terraform Labs announced it was dissolving operations and selling its Terra ecosystem projects after reaching a $4.47 billion settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission following the 2022 collapse of the UST algorithmic stablecoin.
In February 2023, the SEC charged Kwon for misleading investors and violating securities laws by selling unregistered securities, leading to the settlement that included $3.58 billion in disgorgement, a $420 million civil penalty, a ban on Kwon from serving as an officer or director of any public company and his contribution of approximately $204 million to a bankruptcy estate for compensating harmed investors. The company later filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January 2024.
Kwon allegedly defrauded investors by falsely advertising the company’s blockchain products as decentralized, reliable, and effective while “engaging in market manipulation,” according to FBI Assistant Director in Charge James Dennehy. He added that Kwon “allegedly played puppet master to maintain this crafted illusion and ensnare investors” for at least four years.
The indictment states that Kwon knew Terraform products failed to deliver as promised but continued to misrepresent the company’s investing platform and its “Terra Protocol,” which allegedly used an algorithm to sustain the value of its so-called “stablecoin” pegged to the U.S. dollar. It adds that much of the company’s growth “followed Kwon’s misrepresentations about Terraform and its technology.”
Kwon’s fraudulent actions and the resulting crash of Terraform’s cryptocurrencies in May 2022 “erased over $40 billion in investor assets, causing devastating losses to countless investors in the United States and around the world,” according to U.S. Attorey General Daniel Gitner.
The former CEO made a number of false representations about Terraform products, the indictment alleges, including that the company’s blockchain was being used to process billions of dollars in financial transactions for the Korean payment-processing platform Chai.
“But as Kwon knew, Chai processed transactions through traditional financial processing networks, not the Terra blockchain,” the indictment reads.
Kwon was arrested in Europe in 2023 for attempting to use a fraudulent passport to travel to a country that did not have an extradition treaty with the U.S., according to the Justice Department. He will next appear before a judge in the U.S. District for the Southern District of New York on January 8.