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Titanium Blockchain founder and CEO Michael Alan Stollery pleaded guilty to conducting a fraudulent initial coin offering (ICO) touted to be worth $21 million.
Stolleryâs operation was unregistered and soaked in falsities
Stollery, was charged by a Los Angeles district court earlier in June on one count of securities fraud. The prosecutor alleged that Stollery lured unsuspecting investors to buy âBARs,â a crypto coin issued by his firm, using falsified data, which was supported by ludicrous claims about the tokenâs potential upside.
Stollery also falsified white papers, which misled people about his project and its underlying digital framework. Furthermore, he faked numerous customer testimonials on the official Titanium Blockchain website while also lying about his companyâs partnerships.Â
Via Titaniumâs initial coin offering, Stollery raised approximately $21M between November 2017 and January 2018. However, the ICO was not registered with the American Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as is mandatory, thus making his entire operation illegal from the get-go.
Stollery faces up to 20 years in prison
The guilty plea comes after Stollery admitted to using the illegally acquired money to pay for his personal expenses, including credit card payments and other charges incurred during his many vacations to Hawaii.
In 2018, American authorities froze Titaniumâs assets after Stollery lied about his professional relationships with the Federal Reserve and major multinationals, including PayPal and Verizon.Â
Andrew Holmes, Stolleryâs defense counsel, noted that the guilty plea emanates directly as a result of the SECâs above-stated charges, adding:
âIt was overexuberance that went beyond what he shouldâve done. Mr. Stollery is very remorseful and he wants to get as much money as possible back to those that put their money in,â
Stollery is out of police custody on a signature bond as of press time. He faces a life imprisonment sentence of up to 20 years alongside other potential monetary penalties. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov 18.
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The post Titanium Blockchain CEO pleads guilty in $21M fraudulent ICO case appeared first on CryptoSlate.
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