'Cryptoqueen' Ruja Ignatova added to FBI's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list
Ruja Ignatova, the so-called Cryptoqueen, has now been named a most-wanted fugitive by the FBI.
The FBI added Ignatova to its 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list
for allegedly defrauding investors of more than $4 billion through OneCoin, a
cryptocurrency company she helped found in 2014.
The move comes after Europol added Ignatova, 42, to its
most-wanted list earlier this year.
"It's an important tool for us, the top 10 list,"
FBI Assistant Director Michael Driscoll told reporters during a news briefing
Thursday. "We think the public is in the best position to help."
Ignatova, a Bulgarian lawyer, claimed to have invented a
cryptocurrency to rival Bitcoin. She and others allegedly made false statements
while soliciting investments and promoted OneCoin through a multi-level
marketing strategy, according to the FBI.
OneCoin also claimed to have a private blockchain, as
opposed to a public and verifiable one that other virtual currencies have, and
the value of OneCoin was determined by the company rather than market demand,
the FBI said.
The FBI alleges that Ignatova ultimately persuaded investors
to give her billions of dollars, capitalizing on the buzz around
cryptocurrencies, before disappearing in 2017 after a federal warrant was
issued for her arrest.
"She's got a lot of money and she hit the road pretty
quick," Driscoll said.
Investigators believe Ignatova may have been tipped off that
she was under investigation by U.S. and international authorities. On Oct. 25,
2017, she traveled from Sofia, Bulgaria, to Athens, Greece, and has not been
seen since, according to the FBI.
Ignatova was indicted in February 2018 on one count each of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money
laundering, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, and securities fraud.
Ignatova is the only woman on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted
Fugitives list and is the 11th in its 72-year history, said the FBI, which is
offering a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to her arrest. She
was known to travel throughout Eastern Europe and the Mideast and may have had
plastic surgery to alter her appearance, the FBI said.
While speaking at an event in London in June 2016, Ignatova
told the crowd she believed OneCoin would become the "no. 1 cryptocurrency
worldwide." Though in an email with her co-founder, Ignatova reportedly
described an exit strategy for OneCoin as, "Take the money and run and
blame someone else for this..." according to federal prosecutors.
Several others also have been charged in connection with
OneCoin, including Ignatova's brother, Konstantin Ignatov, who ran the business
after she disappeared from public view. He was arrested in March 2019 on a wire
fraud conspiracy charge stemming from his role in the "international
pyramid scheme," federal prosecutors said. He pleaded guilty to multiple
felonies and is awaiting sentencing.
Attorney Mark Scott was convicted in 2019 for his role in
laundering $400 million worth of fraud proceeds on behalf of OneCoin leadership
and is awaiting sentencing, prosecutors said.
Karl Sebastian Greenwood, another OneCoin co-founder, is
awaiting trial on fraud charges.
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