Source: Cryptonews
Original Title: American Bitcoin Academy founder Brian Sewell gets 3 years for $2.9M crypto fraud
Original Link:
Case Overview
Utah resident Brian Gary Sewell has been sentenced to three years in federal prison for his role in defrauding investors out of roughly $2.9 million through an unlicensed cryptocurrency business.
Key Details
Sewell was sentenced to three years in federal prison for defrauding investors and running an unlicensed cryptocurrency business
Prosecutors said he collected over $2.9 million from at least 17 victims by misrepresenting his experience and investment capabilities
A separate case found Sewell operated a cash-to-crypto service that converted over $5.4 million for third parties without proper registration
Sentencing
Sewell pleaded guilty to wire fraud and was sentenced to 36 months in prison and three years of supervised release. The 54-year-old Washington County resident admitted to running two parallel schemes, both of which will run concurrently with each other for a total of three years’ imprisonment. As part of this sentencing, he has been ordered to pay a combined $3.8 million in restitution.
The Schemes
Scheme 1: Investment Fraud
Between December 2017 and April 2024, Sewell allegedly “obtained money from at least 17 investors by lying about his experience, education, and ability to generate large returns” and managed to collect over $2.9 million.
Scheme 2: Unlicensed Money Transmitting
From March 2020 to September 2020, he launched another unlawful venture through Rockwell Capital Management, which authorities said was “an unlicensed money transmitting business.”
“Sewell and his company converted bulk cash to cryptocurrency on behalf of third parties, including criminals engaged in fraud and drug trafficking,” the prosecutors said. In total, he helped convert over $5.4 million worth of cash to cryptocurrency and did so “without complying with federal laws designed to prevent the movement of illicit funds.”
Investigation Background
Sewell also operated the American Bitcoin Academy and was first officially charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission in February 2024. At the time, Sewell and Rockwell Capital Management reached a settlement with the SEC without admitting or denying the allegations and were ordered to pay a $223,229 civil penalty alongside $1.6 million in disgorgement and interest. He was later arrested in Salt Lake City after a federal grand jury returned an indictment against him.
Related Case
Sewell’s sentencing comes just a few months after the DOJ secured a 4-year prison sentence for a certain wallet platform’s co-founder and CTO, and a five-year term for its CEO. As part of that sentencing, the duo agreed to forfeit $237.8 million in assets linked to illicit transactions and paid roughly $6.3 million in criminal monetary penalties and restitution.
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DeadTrades_Walking
· 3h ago
I have to say, it's the same old trick... pretending to be the "Bitcoin Academy" to scam people. This guy's guts are really impressive.
View OriginalReply0
ChainProspector
· 16h ago
Another scammer from "Bitcoin Academy" has been caught. This is a $2.9 million scheme. Those who deceive people under the guise of education should really be punished.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeLover
· 16h ago
Another one pretending to educate while scamming people, they deserve to get in.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoNomics
· 16h ago
honestly, if you actually ran a proper regression analysis on founder fraud rates vs. token performance, you'd see the correlation matrix tells a *very* different story than what these surface-level reports suggest. $2.9M? that's statistically insignificant noise compared to the broader market inefficiencies nobody talks about.
Reply0
ChainSpy
· 16h ago
Another one cutting leeks under the guise of education, this guy really has guts... 2.9M with this level?
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeNightmare
· 16h ago
Another "academy" scammer, 2.9 million USD. I can't even save enough Gwei late at night to match that number...
View OriginalReply0
On-ChainDiver
· 16h ago
These days, people still dare to commit scams? 2.9M for three years in prison doesn't seem worth it.
American Bitcoin Academy founder Brian Sewell gets 3 years for $2.9M crypto fraud
Source: Cryptonews Original Title: American Bitcoin Academy founder Brian Sewell gets 3 years for $2.9M crypto fraud Original Link:
Case Overview
Utah resident Brian Gary Sewell has been sentenced to three years in federal prison for his role in defrauding investors out of roughly $2.9 million through an unlicensed cryptocurrency business.
Key Details
Sentencing
Sewell pleaded guilty to wire fraud and was sentenced to 36 months in prison and three years of supervised release. The 54-year-old Washington County resident admitted to running two parallel schemes, both of which will run concurrently with each other for a total of three years’ imprisonment. As part of this sentencing, he has been ordered to pay a combined $3.8 million in restitution.
The Schemes
Scheme 1: Investment Fraud
Between December 2017 and April 2024, Sewell allegedly “obtained money from at least 17 investors by lying about his experience, education, and ability to generate large returns” and managed to collect over $2.9 million.
Scheme 2: Unlicensed Money Transmitting
From March 2020 to September 2020, he launched another unlawful venture through Rockwell Capital Management, which authorities said was “an unlicensed money transmitting business.”
“Sewell and his company converted bulk cash to cryptocurrency on behalf of third parties, including criminals engaged in fraud and drug trafficking,” the prosecutors said. In total, he helped convert over $5.4 million worth of cash to cryptocurrency and did so “without complying with federal laws designed to prevent the movement of illicit funds.”
Investigation Background
Sewell also operated the American Bitcoin Academy and was first officially charged by the Securities and Exchange Commission in February 2024. At the time, Sewell and Rockwell Capital Management reached a settlement with the SEC without admitting or denying the allegations and were ordered to pay a $223,229 civil penalty alongside $1.6 million in disgorgement and interest. He was later arrested in Salt Lake City after a federal grand jury returned an indictment against him.
Related Case
Sewell’s sentencing comes just a few months after the DOJ secured a 4-year prison sentence for a certain wallet platform’s co-founder and CTO, and a five-year term for its CEO. As part of that sentencing, the duo agreed to forfeit $237.8 million in assets linked to illicit transactions and paid roughly $6.3 million in criminal monetary penalties and restitution.