BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse Involved in Telegram’s $1.7B Sale: Report

Published at: Dec. 10, 2019

Two global financial giants, BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse, were reportedly involved in Telegram’s $1.7 billion Gram (GRAM) token sale in 2018.

Telegram allegedly informed its investors that it was using BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse to move and store fiat currency raised in the GRAM sale, industry publication Coindesk reports, citing court filings released on Dec. 10.

A Telegram employee reveals the details in a series of messages attached to the filings

Shyam Parekh, a Telegram employee who is expected to give a deposition before the New York Southern District Court today, Dec. 10, reportedly provided details on how Telegram will process the raised funds in a series of messages attached to the court documents.

In one of the messages, Parekh reportedly provided international bank code for moving money to Credit Suisse via the Swift network. He said:

“We will receive the funds through BNY, which will forward the funds to CS (Schweiz) AG for final credit to Credit Suisse AG.”

According to the report, both BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse declined to comment on the issue.

Filings reveal names of the $1.7 billion token sale investors

Moreover, the messages in the filings reportedly disclosed name of investors that participated in the GRAM token sale. As such, venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins reportedly poured in $30 million in Grams, while Lightspeed Ventures’ Chinese wing Lightspeed China invested $25 million and FBG Capital invested $10 million.

According to messages between Nikolai Oreshkin and Telegram’s former chief investment advisor John Hyman, the wide list of investors also includes a California-based fund managed by Elysium Ventures, which reportedly invested $12 million in total.

Other investors include Foursquare co-founder Naveen Selvadurai, Wordpress founding developer Matt Mullenweg, Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman, True Ventures partner Om Malik, former TechCrunch co-editor-in-chief Alexia Bonatsos as well as fashion tycoon Silas Chou.

Additionally, Hyman reportedly revealed that a significant amount of investment comes from Russia and the countries of the Commonwealth of Independent State from sources connected to Telegram’s founder Pavel Durov.

TON investors voted against the return of their funds amid the probe by the SEC

As reported, Durov will give a deposition before court reporters on Jan. 7 or 8, 2020. A deposition by Telegram’s vice president Ilya Perekopsky is scheduled for Dec. 16, 2019.

On Dec. 7, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requested the High Court of England and Wales push Hyman to testify in the case.

The news comes after the SEC abruptly announced that Telegram’s $1.7 billion token offering was illegal in October 2019. Amid the probe by the regulator, investors in TON reportedly voted against the return of their funds, according to reports in late October 2019.

As Cointelegraph reported, the District Court for the Southern District of New York moved the case hearing on the SEC injunction filing against the TON to Feb. 18–19, 2020.

Tags
Sec
Law
Ico
Ton
Related Posts
SEC Asks Court to Order Telegram to Pay $1.2B Back for $1.7B ICO
The United States’s Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, has filed a proposal for final court judgement in regard of the terminated Telegram Open Network project. In a proposed final judgment filed on June 25, the SEC has asked the New York Southern District Court to order million dollar penalties to multiple defendants related to the case. “Defendants are jointly and severally liable for disgorgement of $1,224,000,000,” the SEC wrote in the proposed judgement. As of press time, the judgement has been received by the court. Although the court has “reviewed and approved as to form” the proposed judgment, it …
Blockchain / June 25, 2020
Kik Representative Will Give Deposition in SEC Case on Jan. 28
The United States Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) has requested a deposition from a representative of Kik Interactive Inc. to provide detailed information about its operations since releasing native token Kin. Kik Interactive, the Canadian company behind the Kik messenger application, has been dragged into a long-standing legal battle with the U.S. regulator. The SEC claims that the company violated securities laws when it carried out Kik’s token distribution in 2017. On Jan. 23, a Manhattan federal judge ordered that Kik Interactive share with the SEC information detailing how its business has changed since 2018. As such, the regulator called Kik’s …
Blockchain / Jan. 23, 2020
Blockchain Association Supports Telegram in Legal Battle With SEC
The Blockchain Association has filed an amicus curiae brief in response to litigation against Telegram initiated by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The Blockchain Association, a collective of advocates involved with the blockchain industry, filed an amicus curiae brief with the court of the Southern District of New York on Jan. 21. An amicus curiae is an entity that does not participate in specific litigation, but has a right to advise the court regarding some matter of law directly concerning the lawsuit. Need for more clarity from the SEC In the letter, the association disputes the charges …
Blockchain / Jan. 22, 2020
Telegram Asks Court to Appeal Halt on GRAM Distribution
Telegram is seeking to appeal a United States federal court’s recent ruling in favor of the Securities and Exchange Commission to halt distribution of GRAM tokens. Rejection of the injunction and the status of the investment contracts In response to the court’s preliminary injunction earlier the same day freezing GRAM issuance until at least the trial, Telegram filed a brief notice of appeal with the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The injunction itself tentatively agrees with the SEC’s argument that the contracts governing GRAM issuance — though critically, not necessarily GRAM tokens themselves — seem to qualify as …
Regulation / March 25, 2020
Abramoff-linked crypto firm says SEC has no case against it
The NAC Foundation has accused the United States Securities and Exchange Commission of misconduct in an ongoing case. According to court documents Oct. 20, Rowland Marcus Andrade and his company NAC Foundation asked a San Francisco federal judge to dismiss the SEC’s June lawsuit alleging that he and his associate Jack Abramoff defrauded investors in a $5.6 million token offering. Andrade argued that the SEC “purposefully attempted to mislead the court” by accusing him of offering a technology that had never been developed. According to the defendant, the SEC was aware that he held patents for Anti-Money Laundering technology related …
Regulation / Oct. 21, 2020