DOJ Charges $236M Crypto Crime Ring That Spent Millions at Nightclubs

By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/16 14:45:04
0
Share
copy
In brief Twelve more defendants have been charged in a sweeping cyber-fraud case. The alleged cybercrime ring laundered crypto through mixers, shell companies, and stuffed toys. It comes as the FBI reported crypto investment fraud had spiked to $5.8B in losses last year. U.S. prosecutors have charged 12 more people in connection with a cybercrime ring that allegedly stole more than $263 million in crypto through a sophisticated social engineering and hacking operation and spent the proceeds on expensive cars, nightclub blowouts, and luxury goods. The charges , unsealed Thursday in a four-count indictment against Malone Lam, 20, and Jeandiel Serrano, 21, were announced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, the FBI, and IRS Criminal Investigation. Serrano is not in the new indictment. Alongside Lam, the new suspects include both U.S. citizens and foreign nationals, with arrests made in California and warrants issued for two individuals believed to be in Dubai. All but one are aged between 18 and 21, with two defendants’ identities not known beyond their online monikers. Of the thirteen, twelve defendants are charged with RICO conspiracy, nine have an additional charge of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, and eight conspiracy charges to commit wire fraud. A final defendant, 19-year-old John Tucker Desmond, is charged with obstruction of justice for destroying evidence. The case comes amid a broader surge in cybercrime. The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reported $16.6 billion in internet crime losses in 2024, up 33% from the year prior. Crypto-related fraud made up a significant chunk, with 149,686 complaints. Funds lost totaled more than $9.3 billion in losses, up 66% over 2023. Spending spree According to the indictment , the group operated from at least October 2023 through March 2025, initially bonding over online gaming platforms. Members assumed various roles, from database hackers and target identifiers to callers who impersonated support agents to trick victims and launderers who converted stolen crypto into cash. Group member Marlon Ferro, 19, conducted physical burglaries to steal crypto wallets, including a July 2024 break-in at a New Mexico home. The defendants are also accused of laundering funds through mixers, peel chains, VPNs, and shell companies. Money was used for the purchase of at least 28 exotic cars—some worth up to $3.8 million each—private jet rentals, several half-million-dollar nightclub tabs, and gifting Hermes bags to girlfriends. Bulk cash was reportedly shipped hidden inside stuffed Squishmallows, a popular soft toy brand. Members of the group rented luxury homes in the Hamptons, Los Angeles, and Miami, and hired private security guards. Prosecutors said forfeited assets include Lamborghinis, Ferraris, Rolls-Royces, designer clothing and watches, champagne, and a yellow teeth grill. Lead defendant and “organizer” Lam allegedly continued to orchestrate activity even while in pretrial detention, directing associates to deliver luxury goods to his partner. The investigation remains ongoing, with support from FBI offices in Los Angeles and Miami. Edited by Sebastian Sinclair Daily Debrief Newsletter Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more. Source: https://decrypt.co/320383/doj-charges-236m-crypto-crime-ring-spent-millions-nightclubs

You may also like

Dune Stablecoin Research: The Flow and Demand of a $300 Billion Market

In the dataset, transfers are no longer simply labeled as pure "transaction volume," but are classified as different on-chain activities. This is the difference between "just knowing that $100 trillion has been transferred" and "understanding why it was transferred."

Stripe Annual Letter: New cognitive density is extremely high, especially the 5-level model of "AI + Payments"

Every trend here is affecting everyone's future survival.

Sam Altman's Twenty-Four Hours: The Pentagon said "no" twice, but only one was serious

In Silicon Valley, Altman's sub-12-hour move has a name. It's not called backstabbing, it's called timing.

The US-Iran Conflict Spreads to the Crypto Space: What to Expect in the Market on Monday

The most important industry in the crypto world, only 300 kilometers away from the missile's impact point

Lily Liu, the chair of the Solana Foundation, shouted "Don't waste time on crypto," is the crypto industry really dead?

The interest of the younger generation is shifting from cryptocurrency to the field of artificial intelligence, which coincides with the current phenomenon in the cryptocurrency industry.

The little deer live by the water and grass

Mining companies have never been the most devout believers in Bitcoin. Under the pressures of halving compressing profits, financial reports showing revenue growth without profit increase, and coin prices falling below mining costs, the industry is collectively de-risking.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more