Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,149 members, 7,818,453 topics. Date: Sunday, 05 May 2024 at 04:12 PM

Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud - Nairaland / General - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud (449 Views)

Man Jailed For Cryptocurrency Fraud In Makurdi / Scam Alert: U.S. Visa Scam! Please, Don't Fall Victim! / Rape Victim Killed In Fatal Accident While Heading For Court Case. Photos (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by TheRareGem1(f): 6:04am On Apr 25, 2021
ANKARA: Turkey’s cryptocurrency market has seen its first large-scale fraud case after the founder of cryptocurrency exchange Thodex, Faruk Fatih Ozer, fled the country with about $2 billion, leaving more than 391,000 users defrauded.

Ozer reportedly escaped to Albania.

In collaboration with Turkish authorities, Interpol has issued a red notice for the fugitive wanted for prosecution.

Although an investigation was launched into the company whose accounts were blocked by the financial crimes investigation board MASAK on April 21, the scheme revealed loopholes in the system.

The company has operated since 2017. It recently shut down services for several days, saying that it will allow outside investment from “prestigious banks and funding companies” in order to serve partners.

However, shortly after the statement, users began facing problems with money transfers before the site became inaccessible.

The daily volume of cryptocurrency trading in Turkey is believed to be about $1-$2 billion.

The fraud case is the largest in Turkish history, and coincided with an overnight decision by the Central Bank of Turkey to ban the use of digital currencies and assets to pay for goods and services from April 30.

Among other decisions, the central bank also targeted people and companies that fund illegal activities or facilitate money laundering through cryptocurrencies.

The Thodex founder was previously photographed in a meeting with several top Turkish policymakers.

According to a report by the World Economic Forum, Turkey ranked fourth among the 74 largest economies in the world and first in Europe for cryptocurrency adoption by the population.

“Thodex, as a cryptocurrency trading platform, is just another company in Turkey, and there are no laws for this kind of setup,” Fatih Guner, an expert on the cryptocurrency market, told Arab News.

Recent polls revealed that between 16 and 20 percent of Turks used or owned cryptocurrencies last year.

“The adoption is high, but the literacy is not that high. And the lack of literacy is crucial for cryptocurrency trading platforms because these platforms only make money if people buy and sell coins on their platforms. Exchanges from all over the world are investing in PR and dark marketing to gain new amateur traders, with influencers, YouTube creators, newsletter writers and Twitter trolls,” Guner said.

According to Guner, influencers work with exchanges to encourage inexperienced investors with false claims of profit.

“Turkey is a haven for coin exchanges because of the lack of legislation. The government has to step up and legislate heavily,” he said.

“In recent years, we saw that Turkish people heavily indulged in the lottery, football bets and all kinds of lawful gambling. The government seems to see exchanges as some other kind of gambling and loosely controls them to keep people busy while they live on the edge of poverty. Turkey’s cryptocurrency adoption rate is fourth in the world after Nigeria, Vietnam and the Philippines. The economic resemblance is uncanny,” Guner added.

Experts have long urged the government to take tougher measures to deal with criminals who defraud amateur cryptocurrency investors.

In March, a man in the southern Turkish city of Antalya killed his two children and wife before committing suicide after losing a large sum of money in Bitcoin investments.


https://www.arabnews.com/node/1847671

1 Like

Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by TheGiftedOne(m): 6:17am On Apr 25, 2021
Sighs
Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by Goldbw122(m): 6:25am On Apr 25, 2021
I don't know why human just like to cheat each other, is like it is their nature, been happy that other people are in pain.. so sad..

1 Like

Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by LMS1(m): 6:57am On Apr 25, 2021
The man fled after the Central bank threatened to ban cryto Transactions just like Nigeria Did..
Na sense wan kee de man, grin
but unfortunately sense couldn't tell him he would be hunted to his last days..
2billion dollars ain't shit money!
Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by Highbeepeeh(m): 7:27am On Apr 25, 2021
This life is just too Risky, especially in NIGERIA MY COUNTRY


To EAT is Risky

To SLEEP is Risky

To get a JOB is Risky

To get a BUSINESS is Risky

To get a GIRLFRIEND is Risky

To INVEST is SUPER RISKY

GOD HELP MAN O

1 Like

Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by Nobody: 8:22am On Apr 25, 2021
Reading......

Ok, I am done reading....
Now if I'm going to be honest with you in my own humble, matured and elucidated opinion without being sentimental, or offending anyone who thinks differently from my own point of view, but also by looking into this matter in distinctive perspective, I would like to say that I don't give a f*ck at anybody being scam while engaging in crypto or any digital money/coin shit. Reason being that, I for one deal only on 'physical' biz...forex, crypto, ponzi scheme and it ilks gat nothing on me.

We move kiss
Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by Nobody: 8:40am On Apr 25, 2021
ANKARA: Turkey’s cryptocurrency market has seen its first large-scale fraud case after the founder of cryptocurrency exchange Thodex, Faruk Fatih Ozer, fled the country with about $2 billion, leaving more than 391,000 users defrauded.

Ozer reportedly escaped to Albania.

He escaped to Albania...?

Why do I suspect that he is connected to the Albanian mob/mafia.

The Albanian mafia sometimes has a way of working with Turkish criminals, fugitives and mobsters- it is an international crime syndicate of sorts. Perhaps, he has some sort of agreement with them regarding protection from extradition(the mafia in Albania is pretty connected).

Either that, or he has plans of using part of his loot to buy himself residency in Albania. I hear Albania has some sort of Residence by Investment programme. You invest some money and you get residency-official. (I don't know if they have launched their Citizenship by investment programme).

But he would have been best served if he had fled to one of Moldova, Russia or Brazil(in fact, any South American country minus Argentina). Those 3 countries are well-known fugitive havens.

All in all, he has left a number of folks utterly devastated by his actions. I am sure returning to Turkey will sound like a nightmare to him.

1 Like

Re: Thousands Fall Victim To $2bn Turkish Cryptocurrency Fraud by AlphaSoul: 3:21pm On May 18, 2021
TheRareGem1:


ANKARA: Turkey’s cryptocurrency market has seen its first large-scale fraud case after the founder of cryptocurrency exchange Thodex, Faruk Fatih Ozer, fled the country with about $2 billion, leaving more than 391,000 users defrauded.

Ozer reportedly escaped to Albania.

In collaboration with Turkish authorities, Interpol has issued a red notice for the fugitive wanted for prosecution.

Although an investigation was launched into the company whose accounts were blocked by the financial crimes investigation board MASAK on April 21, the scheme revealed loopholes in the system.

The company has operated since 2017. It recently shut down services for several days, saying that it will allow outside investment from “prestigious banks and funding companies” in order to serve partners.

However, shortly after the statement, users began facing problems with money transfers before the site became inaccessible.

The daily volume of cryptocurrency trading in Turkey is believed to be about $1-$2 billion.

The fraud case is the largest in Turkish history, and coincided with an overnight decision by the Central Bank of Turkey to ban the use of digital currencies and assets to pay for goods and services from April 30.

Among other decisions, the central bank also targeted people and companies that fund illegal activities or facilitate money laundering through cryptocurrencies.

The Thodex founder was previously photographed in a meeting with several top Turkish policymakers.

According to a report by the World Economic Forum, Turkey ranked fourth among the 74 largest economies in the world and first in Europe for cryptocurrency adoption by the population.

“Thodex, as a cryptocurrency trading platform, is just another company in Turkey, and there are no laws for this kind of setup,” Fatih Guner, an expert on the cryptocurrency market, told Arab News.

Recent polls revealed that between 16 and 20 percent of Turks used or owned cryptocurrencies last year.

“The adoption is high, but the literacy is not that high. And the lack of literacy is crucial for cryptocurrency trading platforms because these platforms only make money if people buy and sell coins on their platforms. Exchanges from all over the world are investing in PR and dark marketing to gain new amateur traders, with influencers, YouTube creators, newsletter writers and Twitter trolls,” Guner said.

According to Guner, influencers work with exchanges to encourage inexperienced investors with false claims of profit.

“Turkey is a haven for coin exchanges because of the lack of legislation. The government has to step up and legislate heavily,” he said.

“In recent years, we saw that Turkish people heavily indulged in the lottery, football bets and all kinds of lawful gambling. The government seems to see exchanges as some other kind of gambling and loosely controls them to keep people busy while they live on the edge of poverty. Turkey’s cryptocurrency adoption rate is fourth in the world after Nigeria, Vietnam and the Philippines. The economic resemblance is uncanny,” Guner added.

Experts have long urged the government to take tougher measures to deal with criminals who defraud amateur cryptocurrency investors.

In March, a man in the southern Turkish city of Antalya killed his two children and wife before committing suicide after losing a large sum of money in Bitcoin investments.


https://www.arabnews.com/node/1847671
OMG! shocked

$2 billion is a lot of investors'
money. Let's hope INTERPOL
can track him down.

(1) (Reply)

School Feeding: FG To Up-scale Additional 5m Pupils / Tiv Youth Group Commends Buhari Over Arrest Of NNAMDI I KANU / How Would You Benefit If You Buy Real Instagram Followers?

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 28
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.