Friday, March 5, 2021

John McAfee Indicted On Cryptocurrency Fraud Charges

John McAfee

The curious John McAfee, a one-time Libertarian presidential candidate, has been indicted on charges related to securities fraud, cryptocurrency manipulation and money laundering, according to the Justice Department.

McAfee and his adviser Jimmy Watson have been accused by federal prosecutors  of using McAfee's Twitter account to promote cryptocurrencies to his 1 million+ followers in order to artificially inflate their market price.

During the period from in or about December 2017 through in or about October 2018, JOHN DAVID MCAFEE and JIMMY GALE WATSON JR., and other members of the McAfee Team, perpetrated two fraudulent schemes relating to the promotion to investors of cryptocurrencies qualifying under federal law as commodities or securities. 

The first scheme involved a fraudulent practice called “scalping,” which is sometimes referred to as a “pump and dump” scheme.  This scalping scheme generally consisted of the following.  First, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members bought large quantities of publicly traded cryptocurrency altcoins, which qualified as commodities or securities, at inexpensive market prices with advance knowledge that MCAFEE planned to publicly endorse them via his widely followed Twitter account (the “Official McAfee Twitter Account”).  Second, after these purchases, MCAFEE published false and misleading endorsement tweets via his Official McAfee Twitter Account recommending those altcoins to members of the investing public for investment in order to artificially inflate (or “pump” up) their market prices without disclosing that MCAFEE owned large quantities of the promoted altcoins, even though MCAFEE had given false assurances that he would disclose such information in various tweets and public statements during the scalping scheme.  Third, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members then sold (or “dumped”) their respective investment positions in the promoted altcoins into the temporary but significant short-term market price increases that MCAFEE’s deceptive tweets typically generated, often for significant profits.  From in or about December 2017 through in or about January 2018, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members collectively earned more than $2 million in illicit profits from their altcoin scalping activities while the long-term value of the recommended altcoins purchased by investors declined substantially as of a year after the promotional tweets.  From in or about December 2017 through in or about October 2018, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members engaged in various efforts to liquidate the digital asset proceeds of their scalping activities into United States currency. 

In the second scheme, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members also used MCAFEE’s Official McAfee Twitter Account to publicly tout fundraising events called “initial coin offerings” (“ICOs”) in which startup businesses (“ICO issuers”) issued and sold digital tokens qualifying as securities to the investing public, without disclosing and, in fact, concealing that the ICO issuers were compensating MCAFEE and his team for his promotional tweets with a substantial portion of the funds raised from ICO investors.  As the United States Securities and Exchange Commission had publicly warned, and as MCAFEE and WATSON well knew, the federal securities laws required them to disclose any compensation paid by ICO issuers for touting securities offerings styled as ICOs.  From approximately on or about December 20, 2017 through on or about February 10, 2018, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members collectively earned more than $11 million in undisclosed compensation that they took steps to affirmatively hide from ICO investors.  In each instance, MCAFEE and WATSON failed to disclose to ICO investors that the ICO Issuers were paying the McAfee Team a substantial portion of the funds raised from ICO investors for their touting efforts, despite knowing that they were required to disclose such compensation under federal securities laws.  Furthermore, in several instances during this ICO touting scheme, MCAFEE and WATSON took active steps to conceal their secret compensation arrangements with ICO issuers from ICO investors, and MCAFEE made false and misleading statements and omissions to hide such deals from ICO investors.  From approximately in or about December 2017 through in or about October 2018, MCAFEE, WATSON, and other McAfee Team members engaged in various efforts to liquidate the digital asset proceeds of their ICO touting activities into United States dollars.

During the period from in or about December 2017 through in or about October 2018, MCAFEE and WATSON caused another McAfee Team member to engage in banking transactions to launder proceeds of the fraudulent ICO touting scheme.
-RW

3 comments:

  1. If the claims here about McAfee are true (big “if” of course) the. McAfee is scum. He’s smart enough to know ICO’s are scams, and pumping and dumping is scummy as hell too.

    Yes, the is the kind of FUD that the feds will try to paint bitcoin with. It isn’t going to work. Every time fed FUD or laws come around and push the price down temporarily, the world will eagerly buy the “on sale” bitcoins. I know I will. People bought bitcoins before you could buy them directly through banks accounts. They do it agains if the feds shut down that on-ramp.

    Love your site, knowledge, and commentary Robert. But have to chime in on bitcoin!

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  2. From a libertarian perspective, I'm struggling to see what McAfee did wrong. He didn't force anyone to buy what he was selling, and lying (if that's what he did) is not a per se violation of the NAP.

    These made-up, victimless "crimes" are such a waste of taxpayer money. But they keep bureaucracies employed.

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