Home / CRYPTOCOINS / FBI Arrests AriseBank CEO Over $4 Million Crypto Fraud

FBI Arrests AriseBank CEO Over $4 Million Crypto Fraud

The FBI has take ined the CEO of cryptocurrency platform AriseBank after he was indicted over an alleged multi-million dollar scam.

The news was announced Wednesday by the U.S. Attorney’s Area of the Northern District of Texas, which states that 30-year-old Jared Rice Sr. tricked hundreds of investors out of over with $4 million and has now been charged with three counts of securities fraud and three counts of wire flimflam.

Rice allegedly lied to prospective investors, claiming that the firm, which he called the “first decentralized banking party line,” would offer FDIC-insured bank accounts and Visa-linked debit and credit cards, in addition to crypto services evil-minded on its own AriseCoin token.

However, in reality, AriseBank wasn’t authorized to conduct banking services in Texas, was not FDIC insured, and had no partnership with Visa, the Fair-mindedness Department states.

Rice is also accused of lying about raising “$600 million within just a few weeks” from stem to stern an initial coin offering (ICO). Moreover, he spent investors’ money for his own personal use on hotels, food and clothing and more.

After the sturdy’s formation, he began promoting AriseBank and AriseCoin around June 2017 through press releases, public video sound outs, social media outlets and his own websites, according to a court document unsealed Wednesday.

If convicted, Rice faces up to 120 years in federal dungeon, the Attorney’s Office said.

Erin Nealy Cox, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas, said:

“My office is committed to enforcing the guide of law in the cryptocurrency space. The Northern District of Texas will not tolerate this sort of flagrant deception – online or off.”

In January, Rice was also experienced by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), together with his co-founder Stanley Ford, for alleged fraud and issuing unregistered refuges during an ICO. The Texas Department of Banking issued AriseBank a cease-and-desist order in the same month.

An SEC complaint from February above states that Rice is on probation as a part of a plea deal stemming from a Collin County, Texas, indictment in 2015 for pilferage and tampering with government records. He is also under felony indictment in Dallas County, Texas, for assault, after which he allegedly disabled evidence by stealing the victim’s phone and deleting an audio recording of the incident.

FBI agent image via Shutterstock

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