A 62-year-old Florida woman was charged for her role in a nationwide cryptocurrency scam, Massachusetts' secretary of state, William Galvin, said Thursday.
Susan Jeanne Barrows was charged with defrauding at least one Massachusetts victim out of $20,000 as part of an investment scheme that involved a fictional cryptocurrency trading platform that has gone by the names Nexus One and CryptoBit Markets, according to Galvin, that state's chief securities regulator.
But the scheme is believed to be part of a larger scam network in which many more people have been bilked out of their money. That network "involves dozens of individuals and companies and tens of millions of dollars stolen from investors around the country," according to the complaint filed in Boston.
While "masquerading" as a member of Nexus One, Barrows "received hundreds of thousands of dollars into her personal bank account" and bank accounts registered to her, doing business as E-Vest Miners, the complaint said.
"This case has all the hallmarks of a classic scheme, in which a victim is convinced to invest their hard-earned money by a fraudster who then comes up with a series of excuses explaining why the victim cannot access the profits showing in their account, and then ultimately disappears with the money when the victim becomes too suspicious to hand over any more money," Galvin said in a statement announcing the complaint.
The victim cited in the complaint was a 67-year-old Marlborough man, who was approached by an individual on an online cryptocurrency investment forum. Via email, the individual connected the victim with Nexus One, which claimed to have proprietary trading software programmed to make investment decisions for those who bought licenses, according to the complaint. The individual promised the victim that Nexus One could guarantee a 10% return on investment, the complaint stated.