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Yield platform Stablegains sued for promoting UST as a ‘safe’ investment

The stablecoin yield platform is being sued for customer losses following exposure to the Anchor Protocol and UST collapse last year.

Decentralized finance yield platform Stablegains has been sued in a Californian court for allegedly misleading investors and failing to comply with securities laws.

On Feb. 18, plaintiffs Alec and Artin Ohanian filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the central district of California.

In it they alleged that Stablegains, a DeFi platform launched in August 2021, diverted all of its customer funds to the Anchor Protocol without their knowledge or consent.

Anchor Protocol offered yields of up to 20% on the Terraform Labs algorithmic stablecoin, Terra USD (UST).

“As an early supporter of and investor in TFL [Terraform Labs], Stablegains is intimately familiar with UST and LUNA. In fact, Stablegains, Inc. falsely advertised UST as a safe investment.”

Stablegains offered a 15% gain for its customers, pocketing the difference from yields offered by Anchor Protocol.

The plaintiffs are also claiming that Stablegains broke federal securities laws, alleging that UST was a security:

“Stablegains plainly failed to comply with federal and state securities laws. Stablegains failed to disclose that UST is in fact a security.”

The complaint added that the firm failed to register with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission either as a securities exchange or as a broker-dealer.

The Ohanians stated that there were “disastrous consequences for Stablegains’ customers,” following the collapse of the UST ecosystem in May 2022. UST de-pegged from the dollar causing a broader run on DeFi and crypto markets in May and an eventual loss of around $18 billion from the Terra/Luna ecosystem.

Following the collapse, Stablegains allegedly altered its website and promotional material touting UST as “safe” and “fiat-backed,” effectively conceding that UST was none of those things, the complaint stated.

Instead of liquidating assets and returning funds to customers, Stablegains , “retained the majority of the devalued assets deposited by its users, unilaterally opting to redirect them into Terra 2.0,” it added.

On May 22, Stablegains discontinued its services, apps, and support for Anchor Protocol, requesting that users withdraw their funds. As reported by Cointelegraph, Stablegains was hit with a similar lawsuit at the time.

Related: SEC sues Do Kwon and Terraform Labs for fraud

The specific amount sought in damages was not detailed, however, the plaintiffs did demand a trial.

On Feb. 16, the SEC filed a lawsuit against Terraform Labs and its founder, Do Kwon, for allegedly “orchestrating a multi-billion dollar crypto asset securities fraud.”

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

Terraform Labs and CEO Do Kwon Charged by SEC With Multibillion-Dollar Crypto Fraud

Terraform Labs and CEO Do Kwon Charged by SEC With Multibillion-Dollar Crypto FraudThe U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged Terraform Labs and its CEO, Do Hyeong Kwon, with fraud, alleging that Kwon and his company orchestrated “a multibillion-dollar crypto-asset securities fraud.” The securities watchdog insists that Kwon raised billions from investors by creating an “interconnected suite of crypto-asset securities,” many of which were involved in […]

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

The Stablecoin Economy Shed $28 Billion in 2022 After a Handful of Tokens Lost Their $1 Peg

The Stablecoin Economy Shed  Billion in 2022 After a Handful of Tokens Lost Their  Peg2022 has been an interesting year for stablecoin assets as the market capitalization of the entire stablecoin economy lost just over $28 billion in value. Moreover, more than $3 billion has been erased from the stablecoin economy during the last 23 days as BUSD shed roughly 23.3% during the last month. Over $3 Billion in […]

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

Terra co-founder Do Kwon hiding out in Serbia, authorities say

South Korean authorities have requested cooperation from the Serbian government in order to bring Kwon back to face charges in South Korea.

The global manhunt for Terraform Labs' controversial founder and CEO Do Kwon continues to rage on, with South Korean authorities now believing he's in Serbia after leaving Singapore in September.

According to a Dec. 11 report from Chosun Media, South Korean authorities followed a tip-off concerning Do Kwon's whereabouts suggesting he is now in Serbia and has been able to confirm it. 

"Recently, we obtained intelligence that CEO Kwon was in Serbia, and it was found to be true," an official told the outlet. 

The report also states that South Korea’s Ministry of Finance “is in the process of requesting cooperation from the Serbian government” as part of the investigation.

South Korean authorities have been on the hunt for Do Kwon since Terra's collapse, but haven't seemed to have had much luck pinpointing his location until now.

The 31-year-old was understood to have moved to Singapore toward the end of April, just before the Terra ecosystem’s shock collapse.

On Sept. 14, the Seoul Southern District Prosecutor's Office's Financial and Securities Criminal Unit issued an arrest warrant against Kwon for allegedly violating South Korean capital markets laws.

Around that time, authorities in Singapore confirmed that Kwon was no longer in the country, and was understood to have flown to Dubai in transit to a new unknown destination. 

Shortly after that, on Sept. 26, Interpol also reportedly issued a “Red Notice” against Kwon. As of Dec. 11, however, Do Kwon doesn't appear to have been added to Interpol’s Red Notice database on the website. 

On Oct. 6, South Korea’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued an order for Kwon to surrender his passport. The ministry added that failure to comply would result in the cancellation of his passport altogether.

Later that month, prosecutors in South Korea confirmed reports that Do Kwon had flown to Dubai for a possible stopover before heading to another destination — which, as it turns out, might have been Serbia. 

If Do Kwon turns out to be in Serbia, it remains to be seen what, if any, legal strings can be pulled from South Korea to try to extradite the Terraform Labs founder.

While South Korea has entered into a bilateral extradition treaty with 31 countries, Serbia is not among them. However, South Korea has also entered into a much broader multilateral extradition treaty with the Council of Europe, to which Serbia is a signatory.

Related: Terra co-founder Do Kwon faces $57-million lawsuit in Singapore

Kwon has maintained that he is not “on the run” and has been “making zero effort to hide." He's continued to be active on social media over the last few months.

The collapse of the Terra ecosystem in May was partly triggered by the depegging of its algorithmic stablecoin Terra USD Classic, USTC (formerly UST), which in turn brought down its sister asset Luna Classic, LUNC (formerly LUNA) by nearly 100%.

Cointelegraph reached out to representatives for Terraform Labs for comment but did not receive an immediate response.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

US Prosecutors Probing Whether Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried Influenced the Terra (LUNA) Implosion: Report

US Prosecutors Probing Whether Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried Influenced the Terra (LUNA) Implosion: Report

Federal US prosecutors are reportedly looking into the potential link between former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried’s fallen crypto empire and the downfall of stablecoin issuer Terra (LUNA). According to a new report by the New York Times, a large chunk of stablecoin TerraUSD’s (UST) sell orders at the time of its collapse appear to have […]

The post US Prosecutors Probing Whether Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried Influenced the Terra (LUNA) Implosion: Report appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

FTX’s Bankman-Fried to face market manipulation probe, Do Kwon chimes in

As part of a broader inquiry into FTX's collapse, federal prosecutors are looking at the role that FTX and Alameda may have played in the fall of Terra LUNA.

United States federal prosecutors have reportedly begun investigating whether the collapse of the Terra ecosystem was in fact triggered by market manipulation tactics by former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried.

According to a Dec. 7 report from The New York Times (NYT), the prosecutors — as part of a broader inquiry into FTX’s own collapse — are investigating whether Bankman-Fried’s empire intentionally caused a flood of “sell” orders on Terra’s algorithmic stablecoin TerraClassicUSD, USTC (formerly UST).

The sudden increase in UST sell orders were said to make it difficult to match them with corresponding “buy” orders, which in turn forced more downward price pressure on UST, causing it to depeg from its intended 1:1 ratio with the U.S. Dollar.

The events also led to the fall of Terra’s native token, Terra Classic, LUNC (formerly LUNA) as the two cryptocurrencies were designed to be linked.

But while no one has been able to precisely determine the root cause behind the collapse of LUNC and USTC in May, it is known that the majority of the USTC sell orders came from Bankman-Fried’s trading firm Alameda research, according to the NYT.

A person with knowledge on the matter also told NYT that Alameda Researched also placed a big bet on the price of LUNC falling.

Like with most comments Bankman-Fried has shared since FTX’s collapse, the former CEO claimed that he was “not aware of any market manipulation and certainly never intended to engage in market manipulation,” according to NYT.

“To the best of my knowledge, all transactions were for investment or for hedging,” he added.

Related: The nightmare continues for Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX — Law Decoded, Nov. 14-21 

Responding to the recent report, Terraform Labs CEO Do Kwon shared his thoughts on the matter to his 1 million Twitter followers in a Nov. 8 tweet, who suggested it was time for Genesis Trading come clean about an alleged  $1 billion loan in UST to “SBF or Alameda” shortly before Kwon’s Terra ecosystem crashed.

Kwon also stated that a large currency contraction that UST underwent in Feb. 2021 was started by Alameda “when they sold 500mm UST in minutes to drain its curve pools during the MIM crisis.”

“What’s done in darkness will come to light,” Kwon added on the matter.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

Binance CEO CZ Calls SBF a ‘Psychopath,’ 3AC Co-Founder Accuses FTX, Alameda of Stop Hunting His Hedge Fund

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SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

Terra’s $2.8B Defense System — Luna Foundation Guard Audit Says Group Spent More Than 80,000 Bitcoin Defending UST Peg

Terra’s .8B Defense System — Luna Foundation Guard Audit Says Group Spent More Than 80,000 Bitcoin Defending UST PegMonths after the collapse of Terra’s U.S. dollar-pegged token UST, the organization created to protect the once-stable coin, the Luna Foundation Guard (LFG), published an audit report audited by the New York-based consultancy company JS Held. According to the report, LFG claims to have spent 80,081 bitcoin and 49.8 million stablecoins, which add up to […]

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

Report: Deleted Files Indicate Crypto Lender Hodlnaut’s Execs Gave Little Weight to Terra Luna Exposure

Report: Deleted Files Indicate Crypto Lender Hodlnaut’s Execs Gave Little Weight to Terra Luna ExposureAccording to a report, the embattled crypto lender Hodlnaut saw a significant loss from the Terra blockchain collapse last May. The report notes that Hodlnaut downplayed the company’s exposure to the Terra ecosystem and allegedly lost $190 million from the incident. Report Says Hodlnaut Downplayed Terra Exposure Following the Collapse More than 1,000 deleted documents […]

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum

4,400 disgruntled investors are hunting for Terra’s Do Kwon

A retail investor group is trying to track down Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon following the crash of the Terra ecosystems’ cryptocurrencies.

Members of a 4,400-strong Discord group called the “UST Restitution Group” (URG) have been attempting to track down the whereabouts of Terra co-founder Do Kwon.

Members of the group, seemingly out of frustration at the lack of results from law enforcement agencies, are scouring the internet for clues and sharing them with the group in an attempt to track down Kwon.

Members have suggested that he could be residing in places such as Russia, Dubai, Azerbaijan, or even on a yacht.

Their continuing efforts come despite authorities in South Korea taking significant steps to bring Kwon to justice, with a Seoul court issuing a warrant for his arrest on Sep. 14 and Interpol having reportedly issued a “Red Notice” to law enforcement worldwide on Sept. 26 in response to the warrant.

URG was originally formed on May. 16 as a chatroom for Terra ecosystem investors and to help launch lawsuits on behalf of its members to recover funds lost from TerraClassicUSD (USTC), the so-called stablecoin that depegged from the U.S. dollar.

One member of URG, Kan Hyung-suk, will soon be traveling to Dubai according to an Oct. 19 report from the Financial Times, a city where many from the group believe Kwon is hiding. Another member from the URG was reported as saying:

“Dubai is friendly to crypto, very international (he would not stand out), and has limited extradition treaties in place. It would seem like the best fit for the 3-5 hour timezone shift apparent in the data.”

Hyung-suk is a 26-year-old software engineer and a former employee of Terraform Labs, the company behind the development of the Terra blockchain, and has been a member of the URG since May 26.

Kwon, who became a controversial figure in the wake of the Terra ecosystem implosion, has maintained claims he is not “on the run” and is fully cooperating with all government agencies in communication with him.

Related: South Korean foreign ministry orders Do Kwon to return his passport

Kwon was interviewed on Oct. 19 by Laura Shin, a crypto-journalist and host of the Unchained podcast, who asked him a range of questions relating to current news stories.

Speaking on his current whereabouts, Kwon suggested that he moved from Singapore following the Terra crash due to privacy and personal security concerns, saying as an example that his apartment was broken into, and stated:

“It’s not in the interest of being on the run or something like that, that I don’t want to disclose where I live. It’s just that every time the location where I live becomes known, it becomes almost impossible for me to live there.”

A spokesperson from Terraform Labs maintains the charges against Kwon are “highly politicized”, and that South Korean prosecutors have expanded the definition of financial securities in response to public pressure. Kwon echoed this sentiment during his interview with Shin.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler avoids direct classification of Ethereum