The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has obtained a temporary asset freeze against Utah-based crypto company Digital Licensing Inc, accusing the firm of perpetrating a $50 million fraudulent crypto scheme.
On Aug. 3 the SEC announced it had obtained a temporary asset freeze, restraining order, and other emergency relief against Digital Licensing Inc., which was operating as “DEBT Box.”
The firm’s four principals, Jason Anderson, his brother Jacob Anderson, Schad Brannon, and Roydon Nelsonand, and 13 other defendants were included in the enforcement action.
The SEC has alleged the firm was selling unregistered securities since March 2021, which it called “node licenses.”
On its website, DEBT Box claims to be a decentralized eco-friendly blockchain “where crypto meets commodities.” It claims to sell “software mining licenses” which need to be activated before they begin mining.
Daily rewards are promised via a number of “projects” that appear to be linked to various industries such as real estate, commodities, agriculture, and technology.
The firm has 30,000 X (Twitter) followers and was still active up until Aug. 3. It has a native token called DEBT which has tanked 52% since the SEC action.
In its complaint, the SEC said the firm falsely claimed that these “nodes” would generate crypto tokens through mining and that revenue-generating businesses would drive up the token values, resulting in huge gains for investors.
We obtained a temporary asset freeze, restraining order, and other emergency relief against DEBT Box and its four principals, Jason Anderson, his brother Jacob Anderson, Schad Brannon, and Roydon Nelson in connection with a fraudulent scheme to sell crypto asset securities.
In a statement, the SEC
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