SEC Charges Australian ‘Man Behind the Machine’ in $41M Crypto Fraud Scheme

SEC

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged an Australian citizen who called himself the “Man behind the Machine” in a fraudulent crypto scheme that raised almost $41 million. He and his companies made “materially false and misleading statements in connection with an unregistered offer and sale of digital asset securities.”

“The man behind the machine” indicted by the SEC

The SEC on Thursday announced charges against Australian citizen Craig Sproule and two companies he founded for “investor fraud.” The two companies are Crowd Machine Inc. and Metavine Inc.

The SEC alleged that they made “materially false and misleading statements in connection with an unregistered offer and sale of digital asset securities.”

The securities regulator explained that Sproule described himself in social media posts as “the man behind the machine.” He claimed to have raised $ 40.7 million in an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) from Crowd Machine Compute Tokens (CMCT). The offer took place between January and April 2018.

Instead of using the ICO proceeds for the purpose he told investors, the SEC described:

Crowd Machine and Sproule began diverting more than $ 5.8 million of ICO proceeds to gold mining entities in South Africa – a use that was never disclosed to investors.

The securities watchdog also said that Crowd Machine and Sproule did not register their offers and sales of CMCT tokens. In addition, they knowingly sold the tokens without determining whether the investors were accredited.

Kristina Littman, Cyber ​​Unit Head of the SEC Enforcement Division, said:

Sproule and Crowd Machine misled investors about how they were using ICO products, spending funds on a completely independent program.

The SEC’s complaint “charges Sproule and Crowd Machine with violating the antifraud and registration provisions of the federal securities laws.”

Both and the defendant for damages Metavine Pty. Ltd., an Australian affiliate, consented to the judgments without admitting or denying the allegations.

They are prohibited from participating in future securities offerings. Sproule is also prohibited “from serving as an officer or director of a public company, and [will be ordered] to pay a $195,047 civil penalty.” Furthermore, the CMCT tokens must be disabled and removed from crypto trading platforms.

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