Philip Reichenthal Pleads Guilty to $5m Crypto Fraud
New York federal prosecutors announced on Friday that Philip
Reichenthal, a disbarred attorney, pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire
fraud, in connection with a scheme to defraud investors who believed they were
buying Bitcoin.
Reichenthal falsely represented that he would act as an
escrow agent for the transactions. He engaged with Randy Craig Levine, an
international fugitive and former Coral Springs resident, in executing the
deals. In their schemes, Levine fraudulently induced victims to send millions
of dollars to Reichenthal, who was a licensed attorney at the time of the
fraudulent activities.
According to a Justice Department press release, between
June and July of 2018, Levine persuaded the first victim, the head of a cryptocurrency
escrow firm, Volantis Entities, to wire $3 million to Reichenthal to fund an
over-the-counter desk’s Bitcoin buy. But instead of purchasing the Bitcoins for
the client, Reichenthal wired over $2 million to a bank in Guatemala where
Levine had an account. And no Bitcoins were purchased.
In a second charge between February and May of 2019, Levine
and Reichenthal brokered another Bitcoin transaction deal that never
materialized and therefore conned the second victim. The Florida Bitcoin
investor sent Reichenthal $2 million to fund the purchase of his Bitcoins. Once
again, Levine and his attorney did not purchase the Bitcoin for the investor.
Reichenthal allegedly wired $1.9 million of the funds to bank accounts in
Mexico controlled by Levine.
Reichenthal was arrested on September 14, 2020, and pleaded
guilty on Friday, February 11 2021 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Debra Freeman.
Reichenthal was charged and received a twenty-year prison sentence.
While making the ruling, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams,
said: “As a licensed attorney and escrow agent, Philip Reichenthal was
entrusted to keep investors’ money safe. But as he admitted today, he betrayed
that trust by siphoning millions of dollars of investor money. Now he stands
guilty of wire fraud and awaits sentencing for his crime.”
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