The US Department of Justice has announced that victims of the $4 billion OneCoin cryptocurrency fraud are now eligible to claim compensation from a $40 million asset recovery fund. This comes as a rare glimmer of hope for hundreds of thousands of people worldwide who were left out of pocket by the massive scam.
The OneCoin pyramid: how the $4 billion scam unfolded
Launched between 2014 and 2019 by Ruja Ignatova and Karl Sebastian Greenwood, OneCoin was promoted as a promising cryptocurrency investment. Based in Sofia, Bulgaria, OneCoin Ltd. built a network of 3.4 million investors globally through an aggressive multi-level marketing scheme.
The company boldly claimed it had created a proprietary cryptocurrency named OneCoin, inviting investors to purchase tokens they insisted were a genuine investment. Yet, a sweeping Department of Justice investigation exposed that OneCoin was, in fact, not registered on any blockchain and was a fabricated asset with no real market presence.
OneCoin’s rapid global growth hinged on promoters—individuals tasked with recruiting new investors. In exchange for deposits, these promoters handed out so-called tokens, but there was no legitimate cryptocurrency infrastructure backing the system.
Collapse and legal aftermath shake crypto world
The Department of Justice called OneCoin “one of the largest global fraud schemes in history.” By 2017, investigators discovered that Ignatova and her team were generating fake coins using manipulated software, artificially inflating OneCoin’s perceived value, until the scheme ultimately unraveled.
Co-founder Karl Sebastian Greenwood pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud and money laundering in the United States in 2022. Records showed he belittled his own investors in internal communications. Meanwhile, Ruja Ignatova, the scheme’s so-called ‘Cryptoqueen,’ remains at large. In June 2024, authorities announced a new $5 million reward for information leading to her capture.
“The founders of OneCoin cost global victims more than $4 billion by hiding behind a fake cryptocurrency,” stated Jay Clayton, US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, who emphasized that returning recovered assets to victims is a top priority.
Ripple effects for crypto confidence and regulation
The scale of losses from OneCoin delivered a heavy blow to global trust in digital assets. Many investors remain uncertain about how to access the new fund and what portion of their losses they may eventually recover.
The compensation process for OneCoin victims is also being closely watched as a precedent for similar cases in crypto. Notably, in recent months, FTX—another major player—announced it would reimburse customers with $6 billion initially, and later an additional $2.2 billion, totaling $8.2 billion following its bankruptcy.
Experts suggest scandals like OneCoin and FTX underscore the urgent need for tighter crypto regulation, strong investor protection, and greater transparency across the industry.




