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Man Sentenced to Prison After Spending Most of $6,900,000+ Mistakenly Sent by Major Crypto Exchange: Report

Man Sentenced to Prison After Spending Most of ,900,000+ Mistakenly Sent by Major Crypto Exchange: Report

A 39-year-old cryptocurrency enthusiast who splurged millions worth of erroneously transferred funds will reportedly spend three years in prison after pleading guilty in a court in Australia. Local news site News.com.au reports that in 2021, Jatinder Singh tried to deposit around $65 into his Crypto.com portfolio using his then-partner Thevamanogari Manivel’s Commonwealth Bank account. The […]

The post Man Sentenced to Prison After Spending Most of $6,900,000+ Mistakenly Sent by Major Crypto Exchange: Report appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Prosecutor demands jail for Crypto.com user who received $6.8M by mistake

Australian prosecutors argue that imprisonment should remain a strong possibility for the Crypto.com user who received millions because of an internal error.

Australian prosecutors are reportedly advocating a prison sentence for a Crypto.com user who accidentally received nearly $7 million USD and spent most of it before the exchange discovered the internal error made three years ago.

In May 2021, Crypto.com sent $6.86 million (10.47 million AUD) to Australian couple Thevamanogari Manivel and Jatinder Singh instead of a $100 refund, after an employee allegedly typed an account number into the payment section of an Excel spreadsheet.

However, the exchange detected that the bank account did not match the exchange account. Therefore, a refund was issued, but instead of refunding the 100 AUD that the couple tried to put in, the exchange mistakenly sent 10.5 million AU$ to Manivel’s bank account.

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Couple sent $10.5M by Crypto.com claim they thought they won a prize

The duo allegedly went on a spending spree with Crypto.com’s funds, buying four houses, vehicles, art, furniture and gifts, but 7 million AUD has now been returned.

The Melbourne couple mistakenly sent 10.5 million Australian dollars by Crypto.com in 2021 is arguing in court that they thought the funds were won via a competition.

Thevamanogari Manivel and her husband Jatinder Singh are currently facing a trial in the Victoria Supreme Court over theft charges, among others after the duo allegedly went on a spending spree with Crypto.com’s funds last year.

Appearing via video link in Melbourne magistrates court on Oct. 11, Manivel and Singh pleaded not guilty to their respective charges, with defense being that Singh had thought he had won a contest from Crypto.com, and had told his wife as such.

The funds were initially sent to Manivel’s bank account in May 2021, with Crypto.com compliance officer Michi Chan Fores telling the court that the issue arised from an employee based in Bulgaria entering incorrect details into an Excel spreadsheet.

The Crypto.com account itself belonged to Singh, but the funds went to his wife's bank account as he had been using her bank cards to purchase crypto. The firm did not realize its mistake until an audit occurred in December.

Singh claims that he thought he had won the money as he previously received a notification from the company regarding a competition, however Fores denied the existence of such competition and outlined that Crypto.com did not send any notifications to tell users about competition winnings.

Their charges slightly differ, as Manivel is charged with theft for withdrawing the funds from her Commonwealth bank account, negligently dealing with proceeds of crime, and trying to flee the country.

In March, Manivel was arrested at Melbourne airport, after it was alleged that she was trying to fly home to Malaysia with roughly 11,000 AUD.

She was granted bail on strict conditions in the latest hearing, having to surrender her passport and barred from attending any points of departure.

Manivel’s lawyer argues that she was unaware of criminal charges being brought against her when trying to fly to Malaysia.

Singh is primarily facing theft charges for withdrawing Crypto.com’s funds from the bank. Moving forward, Manivel and Singh are set for a directions hearing in the county court on Nov. 8.

Spending spree

A police officer told the court the funds were allegedly used to buy four houses, vehicles, gifts for relatives, art and some furniture, while 4 million AUD was also sent to a bank account in Malaysia.

Related: French police use Twitter crypto sleuth's research to catch scammers

One of their four houses included a 1.35 million AUD five bedroom property in Craigieburn, which the Victoria Supreme Court promptly ordered to be sold and the money returned to Crypto.com.

1.35 million AUD property: Nine News

As it stands, around $7 million has been paid back, with $3 million still to be accounted for. Civil action is reportedly underway to freeze properties and get the remaining funds back.

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