86-year-old to pay $14M after admitting to running crypto Ponzi scheme
An 86-year-old former California attorney has been sentenced to five years probation and ordered to pay nearly $14 million after admitting to carrying out a multimillion-dollar crypto Ponzi scheme.
In the Oct. 8 judgment filed by Las Vegas federal court judge Gloria Navarro sentenced David Kagel after he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit commodity fraud in May.
Kagel is currently in hospice care at a seniors facility in Las Vegas due to ailing health, where he will serve out his probation unless he leaves — where he will be required to wear a monitoring device.
Government prosecutors — who charged Kagel last year — said from December 2017 to around June 2022, Kagel and two accomplices lured victims into investing in a fraudulent crypto bot trading scheme with promises of high returns and no risk.
Prosecutors say Kagel helped defraud people through a Bitcoin Ponzi scheme. Source: CourtListener
Over this time, the trio “fraudulently promoted and solicited investments and obtained at least approximately $15 million in victim-investor funds for various cryptocurrency trading programs,” prosecutors said.
Kagel helped promote the crypto scam by drafting letters on his law firm’s letterhead, which were then sent to victims.
The official letterheads helped create trust, prosecutors said.
Victims were under the impression they were investing in a legitimate scheme that used trading bots to invest in crypto markets .
Related: Founder of crypto ‘Ponzi’ scheme’ IcomTech sentenced to 10 years in prison
The scheme “guaranteed” to repay the principal investment and profit from upward of 20% to 100% of the principal investment within 30 days.
Kagel claimed to have 1,000 Bitcoin ( BTC ) in a wallet worth $11 million in January 2018, held in escrow to guarantee investments. He also falsely stated that he had invested in crypto before to help broker trust.
In 2023, the California Supreme Court revoked Kagel’s law license for failing to respond to disciplinary charges, saying he misappropriated $25,000 in client funds.
Previously, his law license had been suspended twice, once in 1997 and 2012.
Both of Kagel’s alleged accomplices, David Saffron and Vincent Mazzotta, pleaded not guilty and await trial in a Los Angeles federal court next April.
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