Two Estonians Deceived Investors with a Fake Crypto Exchange, Stealing $577 Million 


The Massive Crypto Scam Unveiled
Two Estonian citizens have pleaded guilty to orchestrating a large-scale cryptocurrency scam that defrauded hundreds of thousands of investors worldwide. This was reported by the U.S. Department of Justice.
How the Fraud Worked
According to investigators, 40-year-olds Sergey Potapenko and Ivan Turygin ran the fraudulent scheme from 2015 to 2019. They lured investors into purchasing shares of cryptocurrency supposedly mined by their platform, HashFlare. However, the company lacked the necessary computing power to generate such massive amounts of crypto.
Fake Profits and Lavish Spending

The HashFlare dashboard, which investors relied on to track their earnings, was nothing more than an illusion, displaying falsified figures. Meanwhile, Potapenko and Turygin funneled the stolen funds into luxury real estate, expensive cars, and legitimate cryptocurrency investments on other platforms.
Authorities Strike Back
Following their arrest, authorities seized approximately $400 million, which will be returned to defrauded investors.
The Awaited Verdict

The Massive Crypto Scam Unveiled
Two Estonian citizens have pleaded guilty to orchestrating a large-scale cryptocurrency scam that defrauded hundreds of thousands of investors worldwide. This was reported by the U.S. Department of Justice.
How the Fraud Worked
According to investigators, 40-year-olds Sergey Potapenko and Ivan Turygin ran the fraudulent scheme from 2015 to 2019. They lured investors into purchasing shares of cryptocurrency supposedly mined by their platform, HashFlare. However, the company lacked the necessary computing power to generate such massive amounts of crypto.
Fake Profits and Lavish Spending
The HashFlare dashboard, which investors relied on to track their earnings, was nothing more than an illusion, displaying falsified figures. Meanwhile, Potapenko and Turygin funneled the stolen funds into luxury real estate, expensive cars, and legitimate cryptocurrency investments on other platforms.
Authorities Strike Back
Following their arrest, authorities seized approximately $400 million, which will be returned to defrauded investors.
The Awaited Verdict
The Estonian fraudsters are now awaiting sentencing, scheduled for May 8. Each faces a maximum penalty of 20
years behind bars.