Home InternationalArbistar : 10 personnes jugées pour blanchiment de fonds de cryptomonnaies

Arbistar : 10 personnes jugées pour blanchiment de fonds de cryptomonnaies

Spanish Judge Recommends Trial for Ten in Cryptocurrency Fraud Scheme

Madrid – A Spanish judge has recommended that ten individuals, including the creator of the cryptocurrency platform Arbistar, stand trial on charges of money laundering linked to a massive investment fraud. The scheme allegedly defrauded over 32,000 investors of an estimated 200 million euros (approximately $215 million USD).

Judge José Luis Calama of the National Court (Audiencia Nacional) issued a ruling detailing a complex financial network used to conceal the origin of funds obtained through the Arbistar platform. The judge’s decision follows a previous conviction of Arbistar’s founders, Santiago Fuentes Jover and a co-founder, to eight and six years in prison respectively for the initial fraud. However, victims have little hope of recovering their lost funds.

The investigation revealed that Fuentes Jover orchestrated a system of shell companies – often with minimal capital, few employees, and lacking proper accounting – to channel the illicit funds. Venus Capital was identified as a central hub in this network, used to divert money from unsuspecting investors.

“Fuentes Jover disposed of the majority of these funds through transfers to companies he owned and those of his collaborators, and also acquired luxury cars, a boat, and paid for goods and services completely unrelated to the business to which investors had entrusted their capital,” the judge’s ruling stated, according to Europa Press.

The judge found evidence suggesting that the promised algorithmic trading system touted by Arbistar was a fabrication. Investors were led to believe their funds were being actively invested, when in reality, no such investment occurred. The funds were simply moved through a series of transactions designed to obscure their origin and make them appear legitimate.

This case highlights the growing risks associated with unregulated cryptocurrency investments and the challenges law enforcement faces in tracking and recovering funds lost to online fraud. Spain’s National Police have been increasingly focused on combating financial crimes involving cryptocurrencies, reflecting a global trend. According to a recent report by the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA), cryptocurrency-related fraud accounted for a significant portion of cybercrime losses in 2023.

The judge’s ruling allows prosecutors and private accusers ten days to formally request a trial or dismiss the charges. The case is being closely watched by victims of the Arbistar scheme, who are seeking justice and accountability for the financial devastation they have suffered.

Further complicating matters, a related case recently saw a businessman who allegedly financed Alvise Pérez, another figure involved in a separate cryptocurrency fraud, remanded in custody pending investigation. This underscores the interconnected nature of these schemes and the ongoing efforts to dismantle them.

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