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FBI Busts $43M Crypto and Las Vegas Hospitality Ponzi Scheme
Harvey Hunter
Last updated:
May 2, 2024 07:57 EDT | 3 min read
On May 1st, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), alongside a New York court, charged Dalpour
According to a press release from the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, Dalpour allegedly lured unsuspecting investors with promises of substantial returns that were nothing more than a facade to conceal a large-scale Ponzi scheme
The Scheme ran from 2020 through April 2024, targeting investors located in the U.S. and abroad.
Through an entity he controlled, Dalpour solicited investments in fictitious business ventures. These ventures included a Las Vegas hospitality enterprise and a crypto trading enterprise.
How Dalpour Created A Facade
Dalpour enticed investors with promises of lucrative annual returns starting at 42%. This was reinforced with purported insurance and escrow arrangements to create false security in their investments. US Attorney Damian Williams said:
These ludicrous prospects were backed with fabricated contracts, falsified bank statements, and fictitious email correspondence which lulled investors into believing in the viability of the ventures.
As part of the purported Las Vegas hospitality enterprise, Dalpour falsely represented that his “entity” had contracted with a Management Company and a prominent Las Vegas hotel
Dalpour Allegedly falsified proceeds from entertainment packages for the hotel and visitors to several Las Vegas-based sports stadiums.
In connection with the Las Vegas Ponzi scheme, Dalpour further misrepresented a so-called crypto trading enterprise, which he operated
As part of the cryptocurrency trading scheme, he claimed that he purchased crypto at wholesale. He then presumably sold it at a profit to retail investors.
In reality, the investor funds were siphoned off to fulfill earlier investors’ returns, with Dalpour pocketing the difference
In all, he accumulated over $43 million, which he used to finance personal expenses. These included approximately $1.7 million in gambling losses, over $400,000 from Art Direct, and private school tuition for his children.
The scheme came crashing down in November 2023 when a group of victims confronted Dalpour. He confessed to all his wrongdoings: the fake ventures, falsified documents, and misallocated funds.
Dalpour acknowledged the gravity of the situation. In his own words, “[w]hat you already have, you have, you can put me in jail now. Like right now.”
The Fight Against Crypto Ponzi Schemes
As crypto adoption rises, it has become increasingly prent in scam operations, organized crime, and money laundering schemes
Dalpour’s arrest is just one event in a string of cryptocurrency-related Ponzi schemes stopped by US officials in the last year.
On March 15th, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) took legal action against 17 individuals involved in an alleged $300 million Ponzi scheme operating under the name CryptoFX, a cryptocurrency trading platform.
Days earlier on March 18th, a New York jury convicted two people who promoted the now-defunct fake crypto mining and trading scheme IcomTech.
Most recently, on April 4, Irina Dilkinska, the former head of legal and compliance for the multibillion-dollar OneCoin fraud scheme, received a four-year jail sentence after admitting to her role in laundering millions of dollars.
Cryptocurrency-based crime is an emergent issue that has ed a response from jurisdictions around the world. Education is key to protect those vulnerable to crypto scams.
Representing Dalpour’s arrest, FBI Assistant Director James Smith said:
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