HyperVerse’s Alleged Ponzi Scheme Raked in Nearly $2B, Hired Actor as Fake CEO
HyperVerse was a nearly $2 billion fraudulent crypto investment scheme with a fake CEO at its helm, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and a grand jury allege in a lawsuit and criminal indictments against two of its leaders.
The online investment business, which variously carried brands including HyperFund, HyperCapital and HyperTech, is said to have taken as much as $1.89 billion from people around the world who were drawn in by promises of quick riches. The business began around June 2020.
The SEC lawsuit alleges that Sam Lee, an Australian founder who lives in the United Arab Emirates, and Brenda “Bitcoin Beutee” Chunga, a promoter of the business from Maryland, cheated investors with this “pyramid and Ponzi scheme.”
“HyperFund even hired an actor to pretend to be the new CEO when HyperVerse was
launched,” according to an SEC complaint filed Monday, detailing that the executive known as Steven Reece Lewis, who delivered a speech during the launch event, was a TV presenter who lives in Thailand.
“With no apparent legitimate source of revenues, investor withdrawals were paid with
new investor deposits,” the SEC alleged.
A request for comment sent to the company didn’t get an immediate response.
The SEC said Chunga took about $3.7 million personally and spent it on a BMW, designer clothing, a $1.2 million home in Maryland and a $1.1 million condo in Dubai. Lee took $140,000 in digital funds to a wallet under his control, according to the complaint.
An indictment dated Jan. 25 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland accused Lee and Cunga in a conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The SEC also accused them of offering unregistered securities and demanded they give back any ill-gotten gains.
Earlier this month, U.S. authorities arrested and charged Rodney Burton for allegedly defrauding more than $7 million through the same fake investment scheme, according to allegations from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.
Founders of HyperTech, Lee and his business partner Ryan Xu, also founded the collapsed Australian bitcoin company Blockchain Global, which owes creditors $58 million.