Ex-Cred execs plead guilty to wire fraud over $150M crypto collapse
Two former executives of the bankrupt crypto lending service Cred have pleaded guilty to wire fraud connected to the company’s collapse.Former Cred CEO Daniel Schatt and chief financial officer Joseph Podulka admitted to...
Two former executives of the bankrupt crypto lending service Cred have pleaded guilty to wire fraud connected to the company’s collapse.
Former Cred CEO Daniel Schatt and chief financial officer Joseph Podulka admitted to wire fraud as part of a plea deal with prosecutors, according to a May 13 text filing in a California District Court.
District Judge William Alsup accepted the plea deals and set a sentencing hearing for Aug. 26. Wire fraud can carry up to 20 years in prison and $250,000 in fines for individuals and $500,00 for businesses.
After accepting the defendant's guilty plea, Judge William Alsup set a sentencing hearing for August. Source: PACERLaw360 reported that as part of the plea agreement, Schatt and Podulka admitted to selectively presenting positive “information [while] failing to disclose negative news” as part of a plan to “induce customers to lend their US currency and digital currencies to Cred.”
Federal prosecutors have reportedly submitted a possible sentence range of up to 72 months for Schatt and up to 62 months for Podulka. Schatt and Podulka were facing 13 charges of wire fraud and money laundering.
Cred customer losses exceed $150 millionWhen Cred collapsed and filed for bankruptcy, its customers suffered losses of up to $150 million, but the US Department of Justice said in May 2024 that the assets had since climbed to a market value exceeding $783 million.
In the plea agreement, the defendants agreed that their actions led to losses of between $65 million and $150 million for users.
Former Cred chief commercial officer James Alexander was also hit with wire fraud and money laundering charges.
Prosecutors alleged that the Cred executives misled customers about Cred’s lending and investment practices and didn’t disclose that its loan book relied heavily on the Chinese firm MoKredit, which made unsecured microloans to Chinese gamers.
Cred also allegedly claimed to only engage in collateralized lending, and all its crypto investments were hedged, which prosecutors say was false.
After the price of Bitcoin (BTC) dropped by 40% on March 11, 2020, Cred could not meet its margin calls and neared insolvency, and the three executives sought out new customers while downplaying the risks, prosecutors claimed.
When Cred declared bankruptcy in November 2020, numerous users turned to social media to voice concerns and ask if their funds were safe.
Related: Uphold exchange denies owing millions to failed crypto lender Cred
Other crypto founders have also faced legal consequences this year. Alex Mashinsky, the founder and former CEO of bankrupt crypto lending platform Celsius, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for fraud on May 8.
Meanwhile, Wolf Capital co-founder and head trader Travis Ford pleaded guilty on Jan. 10 to wire fraud conspiracy charges for his role in raising over $9 million from investors with false promises of high returns.
Magazine: ChatGPT a ‘schizophrenia-seeking missile,’ AI scientists prep for 50% deaths: AI Eye
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
Coinbase Quantum Report Warns Millions Of Bitcoin Could Face Future Security Risks
TL;DR Coinbase’s Quantum Advisory Council published a report on post-quantum migration and abandoned coins. The report estimates t...
Elon Musk SpaceX AI Predicts Incredible Bitcoin Price For Next 30 Days
Here is the thing about capitulation calls. They only sound smart in hindsight. Right now, with Bitcoin price scraping along the l...
ZachXBT: Canada More Negligent On Crypto Fraud Than India or Nigeria
Onchain investigator ZachXBT said he has begun turning away all fraud victims in Canada, calling the country’s law enforcement res...
Blackrock’s IBIT Leads $86 Million Bitcoin ETF Inflow as Ethereum Funds Extend Outflow Streak
Spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) drew $85.85 million in net inflows on Friday, with every one of the 12 tracked funds avo...
Spot bitcoin ETFs snap five-day outflow streak with $85.8 million Friday inflow as ether funds keep sliding
BlackRock's IBIT led Friday's inflows at $57.7 million, with Fidelity's FBTC adding $18.0 million, while no fund reported a net ou...
EDG faces FUT in first match at Masters London Playoffs as Coinbase partnership puts crypto in front of millions
The partnership between Coinbase and Riot Games at Masters London could accelerate mainstream crypto adoption through esports inte...