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- OneCoin - Wikipedia
OneCoin was launched in late 2014 It was not a decentralized cryptocurrency but rather a centralized pyramid scheme hosted on OneCoin Ltd's servers which was marketed as a cryptocurrency The scheme was set up by Ruja Ignatova with Sebastian Greenwood acting as the lead distributor in the pyramid [15]
- Ruja Ignatova: Fugitive ‘Cryptoqueen’ hit by asset freeze - BBC
A woman wanted by the FBI for orchestrating a $4 5bn cryptocurrency scam called OneCoin has been hit with a global asset freeze, brought on behalf of investors seeking compensation
- Unraveling OneCoin: Understanding the Largest Cryptocurrency Ponzi . . .
OneCoin, a multi-billion dollar cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme, was created by Bulgarian national Ruja Ignatova in 2014 The companies behind the scheme were OneCoin Ltd and OneLife Network Ltd Initially marketed as a legitimate cryptocurrency, OneCoin never had an active trading market or blockchain system
- Lie To Me - The OneCoin Scandal – DW – 06 30 2025
OneCoin was launched in 2014 and billed as the world's largest cryptocurrency Founder Ruja Ignatova earned many millions of Euros before a tech nerd stepped in to stop the scam - putting himself
- Co-Founder Of Multi-Billion-Dollar Cryptocurrency Pyramid Scheme . . .
OneCoin, which began operations in 2014 and was based in Sofia, Bulgaria, marketed and sold a fraudulent cryptocurrency by the same name through a global multi-level-marketing (“MLM”) network
- OneCoin | CoinDesk
OneCoin was a digital currency scheme widely recognized as a fraudulent Ponzi scheme Founded by Ruja Ignatova in 2014, it was marketed as a cryptocurrency, but in reality, lacked the fundamental
- OneCoin Scam: 7 Shocking Facts Behind the $25 Billion Fraud
Uncover the shocking facts behind the OneCoin scam, a $25 billion fraud involving Ruja Ignatova and global legal actions
- Co-founder of fake cryptocurrency scheme sentenced to 20 years in US . . .
A federal judge in New York sentenced the co-founder of the purported cryptocurrency OneCoin to 20 years in prison on Tuesday for what prosecutors called a $4 billion fraud
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