Christopher Alexander Delgado, president and CEO of Florida-based Goliath Ventures, has admitted guilt in a wide-ranging cryptocurrency fraud investigation. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida announced that 34-year-old Delgado has pleaded guilty to charges including wire fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, and money laundering.
The scope of the investigation widens
According to prosecutors, Delgado and his associates operated Goliath Ventures—formerly known as Gen Z Venture Firm—between January 2023 and January 2026 as a scheme in which new investor funds were used to pay earlier investors. Authorities allege that investors were promised false monthly returns from cryptocurrency liquidity pools, when in fact these promises had no basis in reality.
U.S. Attorney Gregory W. Kehoe stated that Delgado misled investors to persuade them to deposit funds and then used the proceeds to finance a lavish lifestyle.
The indictment claims that the money raised was not meaningfully invested; instead, a portion of new deposits was redirected to prior participants, while the remainder funded luxury spending, extravagant events, vacations, and personal consumption.
Glossary: A liquidity pool in decentralized finance refers to a pool of assets contributed by users to facilitate trading, which can be tracked transparently on-chain under normal circumstances with verifiable usage data.
Seized assets span homes, cars and jewelry
Court documents show that Delgado used victim funds to purchase at least six residential properties, valued from $1.15 million up to $8.5 million. These spending sprees also included luxury automobiles, numerous designer watches, handbags, and bespoke jewelry.
| Item | Description |
|---|---|
| Investor payments | At least $400 million |
| Admitted loss | At least $250 million |
| Properties | At least 6 units, priced $1.15–$8.5 million |
Delgado has agreed to forfeit eight real estate properties, 11 vehicles, 30 luxury watches, more than 50 designer handbags and wallets, and at least 29 pieces of jewelry to authorities. Confiscated bank and cryptocurrency accounts are also included in the forfeiture.
During the civil forfeiture process, it was determined that investors had transferred at least $400 million to Goliath. Delgado acknowledged causing losses of no less than $250 million.
The case extends to JPMorgan Chase
The investigation extends beyond the criminal trial. In March, a victim filed a federal lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase, accusing the bank of failing to halt Goliath Ventures’ account activities and neglecting customer due diligence protocols. JPMorgan Chase is recognized as the largest bank in the United States.
Investigators found that only a small fraction of investor funds—approximately $1.5 million—actually reached the decentralized exchange Uniswap. Uniswap is a major protocol that permits users to trade tokens without intermediaries.
Delgado’s sentencing is scheduled for October 8. He faces up to 20 years in prison for each count of wire fraud and up to 10 years for the money laundering charge. The case was jointly investigated by IRS Criminal Investigation and Homeland Security Investigations.




