US: Two Men Settle Suit With SEC in Connection With Illegal Blockchain Stock Sales

Published at: July 2, 2018

Two Nevada citizens agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), which accused them of profiting from the illegal sale of stocks of UBI Blockchain Internet Ltd., Bloomberg reported July 2.

On Monday, the SEC filed a lawsuit in a New York federal court, accusing Nevada attorney T.J. Jesky and his firm’s manager Mark F. DeStefano of earning around $1.4 million by illegally selling shares in UBI Blockchain Internet Ltd. from December 2017 to January 2018.

UBI Blockchain Internet Ltd., formerly known as JA Energy, is a Hong Kong based company engaged in the research and application of blockchain technology primarily focused on Internet of Things (IoT). The company is based in Hong Kong with a market capitalization of $358 million, according to Bloomberg.

The alleged fraudsters obtained 72,000 restricted shares of the company in October and were permitted to sell them at a fixed price of $3.70, according to the SEC. However, the men allegedly sold the stock at overvalued prices, from $21.12 to $48.40, after the company’s stock rallied. The SEC subsequently recorded “unusual and unexplained market activity” for the company’s shares in January and suspended the sales, which expired January 22.

To settle the suit, Jesky and DeStefano reportedly agreed to reimburse the profit of  $1.14 million and pay $188,682 in penalties. The men did not confess or deny the accusation.

The SEC has long been demonstrating its concerns on fraud in the crypto space. In May, the regulator launched a fake initial coin offering (ICO) website in order to increase awareness of the typical warning signs of scam ICOs and to promote investor education. Though the SEC Chairman Jay Clayton emphasized that the agency supports the adoption of new technologies, he said that it also encourages investors to educate themselves and understand what fraudulent offers look like.

In April, the SEC Commissioner Robert Jackson said that the crypto space “has been full of troubling developments that we’ve seen at the SEC, and especially the ICO space.” However, Jackson reportedly does not think this means either more bans or regulation, but rather a focus “on protecting investors who are getting hurt in this market.”

Tags
Sec
Related Posts
Digital Chamber of Commerce Weighs In on Telegram Legal Battle With SEC
The Chamber of Digital Commerce has filed an amicus brief in the ongoing court case between encrypted messenger service Telegram and the United States Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). Filed on Jan. 21, the document was authored by Lilya Tessler, a partner and the New York head of Sidley Austin LLP, counsel to the Chamber. In the amicus brief — a legal document that allows a non-litigant to submit its expertise or opinion in a case — the Chamber makes a number of arguments regarding how the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York should consider digital assets. …
Blockchain / Jan. 21, 2020
BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse Involved in Telegram’s $1.7B Sale: Report
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 …
Blockchain / Dec. 10, 2019
Report: CEO of Largest Romanian Crypto Exchange Arrested on US Warrant
The CEO of Romania's largest crypto exchange Coinflux was reportedly arrested on a warrant from the United States for fraud, organized crime, and money laundering, local news outlet Mediafax reported Dec. 13. Coinflux has subsequently stopped all digital currency exchanges. Founded in 2015 in the Romanian city of Cluj, Coinflux is an online digital currency trading platform, with reportedly more than 200 million euro worth of Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Litecoin (LTC), and Ripple (XRP) in transactions. Vlad Nistor, the CEO and founder of Coinflux, was supposedly arrested on the territory of Romania upon the request of U.S. prosecutors. Nistor …
Blockchain / Dec. 15, 2018
US SEC Seeks Sanctions Against Individuals Behind Alleged Crypto Scam PlexCoin
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is seeking sanctions against the individuals behind the allegedly fraudulent Initial Coin Offering (ICO) known as PlexCoin, Finance Feeds reports September 26. The SEC has been involved in ongoing court proceedings against the owners of the associated firm PlexCorps — Dominic Lacroix and Sabrina Paradis-Royer — at the New York Eastern District Court since December 2017. The SEC’s initial complaint had charged the pair with violating securities law in respect to PlexCorps’ PlexCoin ICO in August 2017. The complaint had accused Lacroix — whom it called “a recidivist securities law violator in Canada” …
Blockchain / Sept. 26, 2018
Victim of $24 Million SIM Swap Case Writes Open Letter to FCC Chairman
SIM swapping victim Michael Terpin wrote an open letter to the United States Federal Communication Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Pai. In his letter, posted by Coindesk on Oct. 21, Terpin requested that the regulator take decisive action against SIM swapping and end this type of fraud. Terpin proposes to force all U.S. mobile carriers to hide customer pins and passwords from employees and oblige them to inform its customers that they can opt-in to carrier high-security plans, which must include a “no port” option, meaning that a consumer would have the choice to go through the fraud department before the …
Blockchain / Oct. 22, 2019