US SEC Dismantles Crypto Securities Fraudulent Offering

The US  Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC  ) announced on Friday that it had charged four individuals for their roles in a fraud in digital asset securities offerings.

According to the press release, Steven Chiang (known as Cyrus Kong), Eric Tippetts, James Hardy, and Maurice “Butch” Chelliah are accused by the watchdog for their roles in raising over $10 million through two fraudulent and unregistered digital asset securities offerings. In December 2017, Chiang founded NASGO, a company that claimed to have developed a blockchain-based platform that allows clients to invest in digital asset securities called NSG tokens.

Then, Chiang and Tippetts allegedly offered NSG tokens to the public in an unregistered offering, in which they allegedly lied about the amount of NSG tokens sold, the total number of users subscribed to NASGO’s platform, and the projected value of NSG tokens. In videos posted to popular social media sites, Tippetts is alleged to have repeated these claims.

Moreover, the SEC alleges that Tippetts and Hardy created Sharenode, a company to “market” the NASGO platform as investor interest in NSG tokens declined. Tippetts and Hardy used Sharenode to launch another unregistered offering of Sharenode securities called SNP tokens, according to the SEC’s complaint. Tippetts and Hardy falsely claimed that the SNP token was on the NASGO  blockchain  and would increase in value each week by $.10 and increase by $.10 for every new company joining the NASGO platform.

Amount of Funds Allegedly Misappropriated

The SEC’s complaint alleges that the defendants misappropriated nearly $4 million from investors. The SEC also alleges that Chiang and Tippetts misused other Sharenode investor funds by spending at least 133 bitcoin for listing NSG tokens on an unregistered trading platform and funding a team of captive traders to trade NSG tokens among themselves to create the false appearance of a robust market with increasing prices. As a result, traders were led to believe that over $2.5 million worth of NSGs were traded daily on BitForex during the first 60 days and that the price of NSGs was steadily increasing due to investor demand.

The US  Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC  ) announced on Friday that it had charged four individuals for their roles in a fraud in digital asset securities offerings.

According to the press release, Steven Chiang (known as Cyrus Kong), Eric Tippetts, James Hardy, and Maurice “Butch” Chelliah are accused by the watchdog for their roles in raising over $10 million through two fraudulent and unregistered digital asset securities offerings. In December 2017, Chiang founded NASGO, a company that claimed to have developed a blockchain-based platform that allows clients to invest in digital asset securities called NSG tokens.

Then, Chiang and Tippetts allegedly offered NSG tokens to the public in an unregistered offering, in which they allegedly lied about the amount of NSG tokens sold, the total number of users subscribed to NASGO’s platform, and the projected value of NSG tokens. In videos posted to popular social media sites, Tippetts is alleged to have repeated these claims.

Moreover, the SEC alleges that Tippetts and Hardy created Sharenode, a company to “market” the NASGO platform as investor interest in NSG tokens declined. Tippetts and Hardy used Sharenode to launch another unregistered offering of Sharenode securities called SNP tokens, according to the SEC’s complaint. Tippetts and Hardy falsely claimed that the SNP token was on the NASGO  blockchain  and would increase in value each week by $.10 and increase by $.10 for every new company joining the NASGO platform.

Amount of Funds Allegedly Misappropriated

The SEC’s complaint alleges that the defendants misappropriated nearly $4 million from investors. The SEC also alleges that Chiang and Tippetts misused other Sharenode investor funds by spending at least 133 bitcoin for listing NSG tokens on an unregistered trading platform and funding a team of captive traders to trade NSG tokens among themselves to create the false appearance of a robust market with increasing prices. As a result, traders were led to believe that over $2.5 million worth of NSGs were traded daily on BitForex during the first 60 days and that the price of NSGs was steadily increasing due to investor demand.

Source: https://www.financemagnates.com/cryptocurrency/news/us-sec-dismantles-crypto-securities-fraudulent-offering/