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Demystifying the first digital asset "killing pig" sued by CFTC
Case Overview
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has made its first foray into the realm of "romance scams" in a recent case. The CFTC reportedly sued Justby International Auctions and its CEO Cunwen Zhu on Friday, alleging that the company misappropriated $1.3 million in client funds that were supposed to be used for digital asset transactions.
The CFTC lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of California. According to the CFTC's allegations, Cunwen Zhu, through his company Justby International Auctions, defrauded at least 29 clients and defrauded them of more than $1.3 million between April 2021 and March 2022.
Originally, these client funds were supposed to be used for digital asset commodity and foreign exchange transactions, and Justby was supposed to manage the funds and generate income, but Cunwen Zhu used these funds for personal consumption and transferred most of the funds to the scheme involved in the case. Bank accounts, digital wallets, and digital asset trading platforms controlled by employees in China.
What is the specific means of "killing the pig"?
According to the CFTC,** the scammers use social media to get in touch with clients and "pretend to be friends or romantically involved with clients" to lure them into opening accounts. **CFTC mentioned in the lawsuit documents that three types of people played a role in it: (1) "Solicitors" contact planning customers through social media and pretend to be friends or fall in love with them in order to induce them to open and fund transaction accounts; (2) "trading firms," which purportedly established transaction accounts on behalf of plan clients; and (3) "shell companies," such as Defendant Justby, whose bank accounts were used by the defendants and plan entities to receive and misappropriate plan client funds .
Interestingly, CFTC mentioned the pinyin of "killing pig dish" in the lawsuit documents
The CFTC mentioned the method of killing pigs in very detail in the lawsuit documents. According to the documents, the "solicitor" spent more than a year with a client to establish a romantic relationship, and then persuaded the client to open an investment trading account with his company and invest funds. To achieve this goal, solicitors often share expensive-looking photos of their lives, driving records of luxury cars, and screenshots of super-high-yielding fake accounts. These solicitors usually claim to be very successful traders and often attribute their success to an "uncle" or "insider" who provided the inside information.
Once cheated, they will then introduce customers to trading companies, open trading accounts and send money. These trading companies themselves are legitimate, but the trading software downloaded by instigated customers is not real trading software, and various false information will be provided. Often, the trading software will show considerable profits if the client follows the investment advice of the solicitors and trades on the software. According to the CFTC lawsuit, one of the defrauded customers' accounts showed false profits of more than $2 million.
Responses and recommendations from the CFTC
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has issued several customer protection fraud alerts and articles, including "Avoiding Romantic Scams in Forex, Precious Metals, and Digital Assets," warning users of a recent increase in scams on online dating and social media platforms , these scams trick victims into sending money to fraudulent websites claiming to trade forex, precious metals or digital assets.
In Ongoing Litigation Against Zhu and Justby, **CFTC Seeks Compensation for Defrauded Customers, Disgorgement of Disgorgement, Civil Penalty, Trade Injunction, and Permanent Injunction for Further Violations of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and CFTC Regulations . **This incident shows that regulators are paying increasing attention and taking action to combat scams in the cryptocurrency space. It is foreseeable that because digital currency-related financial cases are more difficult to trace the whereabouts of money, the relevant supervision will be more intensive.
"As people try to escape isolation during the pandemic and connect with others online, scammers see a new opportunity to take advantage of the public and commit fraud," CFTC Director of Enforcement Ian McKinley said in a statement. conduct. Today’s action, the first of its kind by the CFTC, demonstrates that the CFTC will hold accountable unscrupulous individuals who defraud customers and protect the public from Internet scams.”