Software and crypto mining equipment offered by the Utah-based Green United LLC was part of an $18 million "fraudulent scheme" that never mined the crypto it said it would, according to allegations by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The regulator filed a complaint in a Utah District Court on Mar. 3 against Green United, its founder, Wright Thurston, and a contracted promotor Kristoffer Krohn.
It alleges the company and the two representatives fraudulently offered securities between April 2018 and December 2022 by selling investments in $3,000 “Green Boxes” and “Green nodes” purported to mine the GREEN token on the “Green Blockchain.”
Investors were allegedly told the firm was to develop the Green Blockchain to create a “public global decentralized power grid” and the GREEN token would increase in value based on its efforts with returns of up to 50% a month.
However, the SEC claimed the hardware sold didn’t mine GREEN as it was an Ethereum-based ERC-20 token that could not be mined and the Green Blockchain didn’t exist.
It added the GREEN token was created “several months” after the first hardware sales to investors and was periodically distributed to “create the appearance of a successful mining operation.”
Instead the real scheme, according to the SEC, was using the funds to buy S9 Antminers — Bitcoin (BTC) mining rigs — which were passed off as the Green “boxes” and “nodes” to investors. The firm mined Bitcoin, not GREEN tokens, which the investors “did not receive.”
Meanwhile, the crypto community on Twitter has hosed down one interpretation of the SEC complaint, which suggests that the SEC is going after crypto miners arguing that selling miners or offering hosting for them is a securities
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