By Best Owie 6 July 2021 | 10:00 pm

‘Bitcoin King’ Arrested For Allegedly Embezzling $300 Million

A report from Coindesk has revealed that Brazil’s ‘Bitcoin King’ Claudio Oliveira was arrested for allegedly embezzling $300 million. An official press release showed that the rest had come after law enforcement agents had carried out a three-year-long investigation. Law enforcement had been investigating the alleged fraudulent company founded by Oliveira. Claudio Oliveira who is the president of Bitcoin Banco Group is better known by the moniker ‘The Bitcoin King.’

This is because Oliveira was amongst the first people in Brazil to openly share their gains from bitcoin with the world. The notoriety he gained from this had earned him the nickname ‘The Bitcoin King.’

Related Reading | Bitcoin Whale Warns Of “November 2018 Vibes.” What This Means

Bitcoin Banco Group, a Brazilian brokerage exchange, has been under investigation since 2019 after the company claimed it had lost 7,000 bitcoins belonging to investors in an alleged hack. Bitcoin Blanco had gotten investors to invest with them by promising them exorbitant returns. The first sign of a bad scheme. Then it started being obvious that they were less than legit when the company began to block investors from being able to withdraw their funds with them.

The Bitcoin Hack

Back in 2019, the company had reported that 7,000 bitcoins were missing and they had reportedly applied for judicial recovery with the authorities. This was a special arrangement with the Brazilian authorities through which the company would have its finances reorganized. They had reportedly made this move in an effort to pay off their investors and creditors who had lost money in the alleged hack.

But it wasn’t too long after when it was discovered that the company had not actually been complying with obligations they were provided at the point of the judicial recovery. The company had also continued to offer investments contracts to investors without actually complying with the market regulators.

Bitcoin chart from TradingView.com

Bitcoin price maintains momentum as price trades above $34,000 | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com

Further police investigations revealed that Oliviera had committed a similar crime in the past in the United States.

A task force called ‘Operation Daemon’ had been formed to investigate Oliviera. Not just for the crimes related to this but other crimes including embezzlement, money laundering, bankruptcy crimes, and criminal organization. The task force which consisted of 90 police personnel began the investigation that would prove to be a three-year-long affair.

The court froze the accounts of Bitcoin Blanco Group following over 200 lawsuits from investors who had lost their money. The official count of the investors impacted by the company’s actions has been put at over 20,000 investors.

Investors’ funds had allegedly been diverted according to the interests of Oliviera.

Subsequent Arrest And Charges

Reports from police officials show that Olivieria and his associates had been served with one preventative arrest warrant, four temporary arrest warrants, and 22 search and seizure warrants.

An estimate made by the judicial economic administrator of the judiciary recovery process puts the amount owed by Bitcoin Blanco Group at R$1.5 billion. With over 7,000 creditors being owed the stated amount.

Related Reading | Robinhood Fined $70M For Causing “Significant Harm” To Customers

“The court orders fulfilled today are aimed not only at the cessation of criminal activities,” said the police report. “But also at the elucidation of the participation of all those investigated in the crimes under investigation. As well as asset tracking to enable, even partially, the repair of the damages generated to the victims.”

Charges brought before the company include embezzlement, money laundering, bankruptcy crimes, and criminal organization.

According to the police, the company had begun all of its fraudulent activities in 2019. This timeline was gotten from looking through investors’ complaints, which had started in 2019.

Featured image from Crypto ID, chart from TradingView.com