1. Home
  2. Omar Zaki

Omar Zaki

Composable Finance CEO denies legal violations as CTO steps down

The CTO stepped down from the DeFi-focused infrastructure firm on Feb. 20, but not without some allegations aimed at his former company and its CEO.

The CEO of Composable Finance has vigorously refuted allegations of legal improprieties at his decentralized finance (DeFi) infrastructure platform, which was being aired by the firm's former CTO Karel Kubat. 

In a Feb. 20 Twitter post, Composable Finance's now-former CTO Karel Kubat announced he had stepped down from the firm. He also leveled a number of accusations aimed at his former company and its CEO. 

In Kubat’s post, the CTO said that he is resigning because the firm has not provided financial statements to him or the community and because he has no overview of the company’s financial health.

He however said he suspects CEO Omar Zaki, who has been legally barred from raising money for companies, was involved in the raising of Series A funds for the company in violation of a cease-and-desist mandate from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Kubat said he also suspects Zaki’s role in the alleged rug-pull project, Bribe, was “much greater than he publicly stated.”

Responding to Kubat’s resignation, Zaki took to Twitter Spaces for an AMA (Ask Me Anything) on Feb. 20, in which he vigorously denied all of the accusations. He claimed that all of the company’s actions to his knowledge were done in full accordance with the law.

In response to claims of a lack of financial transparency at the company, Zaki stated that the company is private and cannot publicly release financial information.

However, “we remain super confident that we have sufficient resources, personnel, and the tech to actually execute upon our strategies […] there is nothing here that causes me concern or should cause the public concern," he said.

Zaki also denied violating any orders from the SEC, stating that the Series A fundraiser was done completely offshore and was compliant with laws in the countries where it took place. Zaki stated that the company retained legal counsel to ensure that no laws were broken, as he explained:

“Those allegations are incorrect, the series A was designed as an offshore sale of utility tokens and we had outside council advising on the offering […] I had made very clear that all offerings of composable were conducted with sufficient legal council”

As for the claim that Composable was involved with the Bribe project, Zaki stated flatly “we had no part in the Bribe project.”

Related: Mutant Ape creator arrested for alleged “fraud”

Composable Finance is the developer of a cross-chain bridging and messaging protocol. In Feb. of 2022, it raised over $100 million through a parachain auction on Polka Dot. Ten days after the fundraise, noted blockchain sleuth ZachXBT successfully doxxed the company’s CEO, known as “0xbrainjar,” revealing that the CEO is Omar Zaki.

In an April 1, 2019 settlement, the SEC accused Zaki of “repeatedly [misleading] investors in the Fund about assets under management, fund performance, and fund management,” during his role as an executive for Warp Finance and Force DAO. As part of the settlement, Zaki was barred from raising money for investors in the U.S.

However, the SEC action was a civil cease-and-desist order, and Zaki is understood to have not been convicted of violating any criminal laws.

ZachXBT also accused Zaki of being involved with Bribe, an alleged rug-pull scam, in the past.

Analysts’ Bitcoin $200K Target Fuels Bullish Fire, Bears Brace for Impact

Exec at Composable Finance allegedly doxed as convicted fraudster Omar Zaki

Omar Zaki was convicted of fraud by the SEC three years prior and is allegedly behind two other crypto projects which suffered devastating hacks.

Late Friday afternoon, decentralized finance, or DeFi, investigator @zachxbt published a series of tweets accusing fraudster Omar Zaki of hiding behind the facade of 0xbrainjar, the anonymous head of product at Composable Finance.

From last November to this February, Composable Finance raised over $167 million through seed funding, as well as crowdloan auctions on the Polkadot (DOT) and Kusama (KSM) parachains. Over 9,000 participants contributed to the DOT crowdloan alone. 

As told by zachxbt, who cited documents from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, Omar Zaki, then a 21-year-old New York resident and graduate of Yale University with a bachelor degree in physics and economics, was charged with fraud after misleading investors while operating an unregistered hedge fund, resulting in a civil penalty of $25,000. In addition, Two crypto projects allegedly run by Zaki, Warp Finance, and Force DAO allegedly suffered hacks resulting in $8.367 million in lost funds — some of which was partially recovered.

The DeFi investigator allegedly linked the two identities together by first creating a burner Telegram to message both Zaki’s personal & Anon account, where both messages were "read at the same exact time." Then, zachxbt reached out to individuals who "confirmed the anon identity link to Yale + physics/Econ background." Finally, a phone number was claimed by zachxbt to be linked to the developer's name, but it's unclear how it connects Zaki's identity with 0xbrainjar.

zachxbt is renowned in the blockchain community for his sleuthing skills in unmasking the history behind anonymous devs of DeFi projects. Last month, the DeFi sleuth correctly uncovered that the co-founder of defunct exchange QuadrigaCX, Michael Patryn, held the position of chief financial officer at Wonderland. Just a few days later, the Avalanche-based reserve currency shut down after negative publicity surrounding the unmasking caused a sharp divide in the community.

This story is developing and will be updated  as more details emerge.

Analysts’ Bitcoin $200K Target Fuels Bullish Fire, Bears Brace for Impact