Dramatic courtroom scene of Do Kwon sentenced for Terraform Labs crypto fraud, featuring crashing charts and devastated investors.
Bild generiert von KI

Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years for crypto fraud

Bild generiert von KI

South Korean cryptocurrency entrepreneur Do Kwon was sentenced to 15 years in prison on Thursday for fraud related to the collapse of his Terraform Labs project, which erased $40 billion in investor value. The 34-year-old pleaded guilty in August after an international manhunt and extradition from Montenegro. The case highlights the risks in the volatile crypto market, with victims describing devastating personal and financial losses.

Do Kwon, a Stanford graduate dubbed the 'cryptocurrency king,' co-founded Terraform Labs in Singapore in 2018. The company developed TerraUSD, marketed as a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar to avoid price fluctuations, and its sister token Luna. Kwon promoted these as the future of cryptocurrency, drawing billions in investments and earning him a spot on Forbes' 30 under 30 Asia list in 2019. South Korean media hailed him as a 'genius' amid widespread investor enthusiasm.

However, in May 2022, TerraUSD and Luna entered a death spiral, plummeting far below the $1 peg and triggering a cascade of crises in global crypto markets. Prosecutors described the setup as an illusion propped up by external cash infusions, essentially a pyramid scheme that affected over a million victims and caused losses exceeding those from the FTX and OneCoin frauds combined.

Kwon fled South Korea before the crash and was arrested in March 2023 at Podgorica airport in Montenegro using a fake Costa Rican passport. He was extradited to the United States last year and pleaded guilty in August to fraud charges in Manhattan federal court. On Thursday, US District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer imposed a 15-year sentence, rejecting the government's 12-year recommendation as 'unreasonably lenient' and the defense's five-year plea as 'wildly unreasonable.' Kwon must forfeit over $19 million.

During the hearing, victims shared harrowing stories. Stanislav Trofimchuk said his family's $190,000 investment dwindled to $13,000 in 'two weeks of sheer terror,' erasing 17 years of savings. Chauncey St. John reported nonprofits losing over $2 million and a church group $900,000, forcing his in-laws to work past retirement; he forgave Kwon nonetheless. Another victim wrote of losing $11,400—'years of effort'—and described the evaporation as 'one of the most terrifying experiences of my life.' Assistant US Attorney Sarah Mortazavi called it 'fraud executed with arrogance, manipulation and total disregard for people.'

Kwon apologized, stating, 'I have spent almost every waking moment of the last few years thinking of what I could have done different and what I can do now to make things right.' He faces additional fraud charges in South Korea, where his wife and daughter reside; the judge denied his request to serve his sentence there.

Was die Leute sagen

X discussions on Do Kwon's 15-year sentence highlight satisfaction among victims and whistleblowers that justice has been served after the $40B Terra collapse; LUNC community members express closure and optimism for a founder-independent future; some view the penalty as too lenient given the scale of losses, while others call it excessive; overall sentiment underscores crypto market risks and need for accountability.

Verwandte Artikel

Qian Zhimin, the 'cryptoqueen,' in a London courtroom being sentenced to over 11 years for laundering billions in bitcoin from a Ponzi scheme, with police and crypto evidence in the background.
Bild generiert von KI

Chinese cryptoqueen jailed over bitcoin laundering scheme

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

Qian Zhimin, a 47-year-old Chinese woman dubbed the 'cryptoqueen,' was sentenced to 11 years and eight months in prison in London for money laundering proceeds from a massive Ponzi scheme. The fraud defrauded around 128,000 investors in China of billions, with funds converted into bitcoin now worth over $6 billion. British police made their largest-ever cryptocurrency seizure in the case.

US federal courts have handed down a total of about 83 years in prison terms to crypto company leaders since early 2024, with Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon receiving 15 years in December 2025 for fraud related to the TerraUSD and Luna collapse. This sentencing wave, driven by major platform failures like FTX and Celsius, suggests a run rate of roughly 41 prison-years per year. The figures highlight a shift from civil penalties to custodial outcomes in crypto enforcement.

Von KI berichtet

A South Korean man in his 30s who laundered $68,000 in cryptocurrency for a voice phishing gang has had his suspended sentence revoked. The Suwon High Court imposed a four-year prison term after he appealed for leniency. The ruling highlights his key role in the scam operations.

North Korean hackers stole a record $2.02 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025, according to a new Chainalysis report, surpassing the previous year's haul by 51 percent and bringing their total to $6.75 billion. The thefts, which accounted for 60 percent of the global total of $3.4 billion stolen, were driven by fewer but larger attacks, including a $1.5 billion breach of the Dubai-based Bybit exchange in February. Experts attribute the success to sophisticated tactics like embedding IT workers in crypto firms and impersonating recruiters.

Von KI berichtet

A cryptocurrency investor lost over $282 million in Bitcoin and Litecoin after scammers impersonated Trezor support to steal a recovery seed phrase. The theft, revealed on January 16, 2026, by investigator ZachXBT, involved 1,459 Bitcoin and 2.05 million Litecoin stolen on January 10. The attacker laundered funds through Thorchain and converted them to Monero, causing the privacy coin's price to surge 36%.

Two former executives of California-based Theta Labs have filed lawsuits alleging that CEO Mitch Liu manipulated cryptocurrency markets, including inflating prices of Katy Perry-themed NFTs. The suits claim fraudulent practices like fake bids and misleading partnerships, amid the company's cryptocurrency plummeting from its 2021 peak. Theta Labs denies the allegations, calling them attempts to secure a settlement.

Von KI berichtet

On March 16, 2022, a masked intruder forced Yuchen Shi to transfer $3 million in cryptocurrency from her San Francisco home, marking the city's first major wrench attack. The case, involving physical coercion rather than hacking, led to an international pursuit and the arrest of her former assistant, Tianze Zhang, in Taiwan. Zhang denies the charges and awaits trial.

 

 

 

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen