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Celsius Founder Alex Mashinsky Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison for Crypto Fraud

Alex Mashinsky, the founder and former CEO of defunct crypto lender Celsius Network, was sentenced Thursday to 12 years in prison after pleading guilty to securities and commodities fraud in a case that stands among the most severe stemming from the 2022 cryptocurrency market collapse.

U.S. District Judge John Koeltl in Manhattan imposed the sentence, which also includes three years of supervised release and a $48.4 million forfeiture. The ruling comes after federal prosecutors accused Mashinsky, 59, of deceiving Celsius customers about the platform’s safety and artificially inflating the value of the CEL token, Celsius’ proprietary digital asset.

The prosecution sought at least 20 years of imprisonment, describing Mashinsky’s actions as a betrayal that caused billions in customer losses while he personally gained over $48 million.

The case for tokenization and the use of digital assets is strong, but it is not a license to deceive,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton in a post-sentencing statement.

Mashinsky had asked for a sentence of just one year and one day, expressing remorse and a desire to make amends. His attorneys did not immediately provide comment following the sentencing.

Founded in 2017, Celsius was based in Hoboken, New Jersey, and promised high-yield returns, offering up to 17% interest on some crypto deposits. Like other lenders in the crypto space, Celsius attracted customers with the promise of easy lending and high returns while funneling deposits to institutional borrowers in hopes of profiting from the spread.

However, the model collapsed under the weight of falling crypto prices. In July 2022, Celsius filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with a $1.19 billion balance sheet deficit, after a customer run on deposits.

Mashinsky’s sentencing follows the high-profile conviction of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who is serving 25 years for fraud and is currently appealing. Mashinsky also faces ongoing civil lawsuits from the SEC, CFTC, FTC, and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

Born in Ukraine, Mashinsky immigrated to Israel and later moved to New York City in 1988, where he became a prominent tech entrepreneur before his fall from grace in the crypto world.

FTX Files $1.8 Billion Lawsuit Against Binance and Former CEO Changpeng Zhao

FTX has filed a lawsuit against Binance Holdings and its former CEO Changpeng Zhao, seeking to recover nearly $1.8 billion (approximately Rs. 15,189 crore) that the company alleges was fraudulently transferred. The legal action stems from a July 2021 share repurchase deal orchestrated by Sam Bankman-Fried, the now-imprisoned co-founder of FTX. This lawsuit marks the latest effort by FTX to reclaim funds amid its ongoing bankruptcy proceedings.

According to the filing from the FTX estate, the transaction involved Binance, Zhao, and other Binance executives selling their stakes in FTX’s international and US-based entities. These stakes amounted to about 20 percent in FTX’s global operations and 18.4 percent in its US division. The payment for the repurchase was made using a mix of cryptocurrency assets, including FTX’s native token, FTT, as well as Binance-branded coins BNB and BUSD, valued at approximately $1.76 billion (roughly Rs. 14,852 crore) at the time.

FTX’s lawsuit alleges that the transaction was carried out using funds that were not rightfully Bankman-Fried’s to use, claiming that they were misappropriated from FTX customer deposits. These allegations echo broader accusations of financial misconduct against Bankman-Fried, who has faced extensive legal scrutiny since FTX’s collapse. The case underscores the complex web of financial relationships between FTX and Binance, two of the largest players in the cryptocurrency industry before FTX’s downfall.

Binance has yet to issue a formal response to the lawsuit. However, the case is likely to intensify scrutiny on both companies and their executives, raising questions about corporate governance and fund management practices in the cryptocurrency sector. For FTX, recovering the disputed funds is crucial as it works to compensate creditors and navigate its way through bankruptcy proceedings.

FTX Ordered to Pay $12.7 Billion to Customers by US CFTC

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