The Brooklyn district attorney said Friday that 23-year-old resident Ronald Spector was charged with stealing $16 million worth of cryptocurrency from about 100 Coinbase users. The man, who goes by the online name "lolimfeelingevil" (meaning "I am full of evil thoughts"), is accused of being behind a phishing and social engineering scam. Prosecutors say Spector posed as a customer service staff of the Coinbase platform to lure...
Ronald Spektor, a 23-year-old Brooklyn resident who was arrested for committing a massive scam by posing as a representative of Coinbase Client Server, is being held at Rikers Island Jail on bail set at $500,000 cash or $1 million bond. According to the prosecution's accusation, Spektor began to...
According to @ImCryptOpus, the latest news: According to Bloomberg, Coller Capital and TPG Twin Brook Capital Partners have completed a $3 billion renewal fund transaction in the private credit secondary market.
Sources: Mexican Navy training ship crashes into Brooklyn Bridge in New York, injuring at least 20 people.
New York City officials say 55 people were injured in the Brooklyn Bridge accident.
According to Cointelegraph, SafeMoon CTO Thomas Smith pleaded guilty in federal court in Brooklyn to one count of cryptocurrency fraud. Smith pleaded guilty to two counts of securities fraud conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, which carry a maximum sentence of 25 and 20 years, respectively. The Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have charged Smith with participating in fraud along with SafeMoon CEO Braden John Karony and founder Kyle Nagy. Prosecutors say the thre...
SBF, the former CEO and co-founder of FTX, told the New York Sun in a Brooklyn jail that he believes he was wrongfully convicted. Saying his biggest mistake was allowing Sullivan & Cromwell to take over FTX in November 2022, SBF said he should have continued to deal with liquidity issues rather than letting the firm take over and mislead clients. Due to this decision, millions of customers were told that their funds were exhausted and had to wait two years before they started receiving payments,...
According to Forbes, former cryptocurrency billionaire SBF, who is currently serving a 25-year sentence for fraud at the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) in Brooklyn, has begun writing his memoir. Forbes saw some of these chapters ahead of time, perhaps because SBF had not yet fully adapted to his new reality, writing in a style like Jane Goodall's account of life with chimpanzees or Victorian ethnologists.