Ruja Ignatova: “Crypto Queen” on FBI Most Wanted Fugitive List

Ruya Ignatova
“Crypto Queen” on FBI list of ten most wanted fugitives

This photo is used to search for Ruja Ignatova

© Police North Rhine-Westphalia

The crypto project OneCoin promised huge returns, but was completely fictional. Countless investors fell for the scam. The alleged head of the gang, “crypto queen” Ruja Ignatova, is now on the FBI’s “Most Wanted” list.

The US Federal Police FBI has put the inventor of the supposed digital currency OneCoin, Ruja Ignatova, notorious as the “crypto queen”, on the list of the ten most wanted fugitives. Ignatova is said to have defrauded millions of investors worldwide with OneCoin. The FBI on Thursday offered a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to her arrest. The FBI believes Ignatova and her associates defrauded victims around the world of billions of dollars.

According to the FBI, around 2014, Ignatova and her partner founded OneCoin in Bulgaria, which marketed a virtual currency that never existed. The Bulgarian-born, who has German citizenship, touted the project as a “bitcoin killer,” meaning it should compete with the world’s largest cryptocurrency.

Cryptocurrency hype exploited

Ignatova made false statements and assurances about OneCoin to encourage people to invest in OneCoin packages, it said. According to investigators, Ignatova and her partner also promoted OneCoin through a multi-level marketing strategy that encouraged OneCoin investors to sell additional packages to friends and family.

With these three pictures, the FBI is looking for Ruja Ignatova

With these three pictures, the FBI is looking for Ruja Ignatova

© FBI

Ignatova took advantage of the cryptocurrency hype to attract new investors. Although the company is said to have used many of the terms associated with virtual currencies, investigators believe that OneCoins were not mined in the usual way for cryptocurrencies. Also, the value of the OneCoin was determined by the company and not by market demand.

“OneCoin claimed to have a private blockchain,” said Special Agent Ronald Shimko, who is investigating the case at the FBI’s New York field office. “This is in contrast to other virtual currencies that have a decentralized and public blockchain. In this case, investors were simply asked to trust OneCoin.”

In October 2017, Ignatova was arraigned in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York and a federal arrest warrant was issued for her. Investigators believe Ignatova may have received a tip that authorities are investigating her. She traveled from Sofia to Athens on October 25, 2017 and has not been seen since.

“Case number XY… unsolved” searched for Ruja Ignatova

In Germany, the lawyer, who has a doctorate, is being investigated for money laundering and joint fraud in a particularly serious case. In May, a public search for her was also shown on the ZDF program “Aktenzeichen XY … unsolved” (the star reported).

FBI agent Shimko hopes the release of the 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list will draw more attention to the case. “There are so many victims around the world who have been financially ruined by this,” Shimko said. “We want to bring them to justice.”

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DPA

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