Operation Cryptosweep has targeted nearly 70 fraudulent ICOs and crypto-related investments products since May 1.
On Monday, the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) announced a coordinated investigation into fraudulent cryptocurrency investments. The investigation, known as Operation Cryptosweep, began on May 1 and has already led to almost 70 separate investigations as well as 35 enforcement actions. More are expected.[1]
"Despite a series of public warnings from securities regulators at all levels of government, cryptocriminals need to know that state and provincial securities regulators are taking swift and effective action to protect investors from their schemes and scams," said Joseph P. Borg, NASAA president and director of the Alabama Securities Commission, in a press release.
NASAA is composed of state and provincial securities regulators in Canada and the US whose mission is to "[protect] Main Street investors from fraud," according to its website. More than 40 state and provincial regulators are taking part in Operation Cryptosweep.[2]
The operation comes after the creation of a NASAA task force in April that was charged with "investigations into ICOs and cryptocurrency-related investment products." NASAA's coordinated action includes raising public awareness of both. "Not every ICO or cryptocurrency-related investment is fraudulent, but we urge investors to approach any initial coin offering or cryptocurrency-related investment product with extreme caution," Borg said.
The Texas State Securities Board is coordinating the sweep and has been active in the space since launching its own investigation last year. Texas alone has taken action against three companies as part of the sweep: [3]
- Bitcoin Trading & Cloud Mining Limited (aka BTCRUSH), which used fake videos of server farms to lure investors into a cloud-based crypto mining scheme
- Wind Wide Coin, a crypto