SafeMoon accused of securities fraud in SEC lawsuit

Yet another executive team facing charges for misusing investor funds on a luxury lifestyle

article-image

DIAMOND VISUALS/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a lawsuit against SafeMoon and some of its top officials on Wednesday 

The SEC accused SafeMoon, creator Kyle Nagy, CEO John Karony and CTO Thomas Smith of “perpetrating a massive fraudulent scheme through the unregistered sale of the crypto asset security, SafeMoon.”

The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, alleges that Nagy falsely assured investors that the token would be locked in the liquidity pool, however “large portions” of the pool were “never locked.”

“Critically, Nagy represented in marketing materials, his whitepaper, and website that these retained assets would be ‘locked’ and inaccessible for at least four years. Smith and Karony repeated and disseminated these false representations in social media posts and other communications with the public,” the complaint said.

Karony, Smith and Nagy then “misappropriated millions of dollars to purchase McClaren cars, extravagant travel, luxury homes, and other things.”

After this plunge, Karony and Smith allegedly used misappropriated assets to make large purchases of SafeMoon to prop up its price and manipulate the market. Karony also allegedly used an account he opened on a trading platform to buy and sell SafeMoon to create the impression of market activity, a practice known as wash trading,” the SEC complaint said.

The SEC alleges that the SafeMoon token falls under the Howey test’s definition of a securities offering because the investors “reasonably expected profits or returns derived from the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others.”

The regulatory agency has engaged in a legal crackdown of crypto companies in the past year, targeting both Binance and Coinbase in lawsuits earlier this summer.

However, they’ve also faced some pushback from the courts, with Ripple scoring a partial win in the SEC’s case against the company. The judge ruled that the programmatic sales of XRP didn’t constitute security sales.

SafeMoon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Salt Lake City, UT

WED - FRI, OCTOBER 9 - 11, 2024

Pack your bags, anon — we’re heading west! Join us in the beautiful Salt Lake City for the third installment of Permissionless. Come for the alpha, stay for the fresh air. Permissionless III promises unforgettable panels, killer networking opportunities, and mountains […]

recent research

Research report - cover graphics (3).jpg

Research

The Across protocol emerges as a dominant bridge within the Ethereum and L2 ecosystem, settling notable volumes with low latency, low fees, and no slippage. Across seeks to expand beyond just bridging as an application, to ultimately become modular, optimistic middleware for settling generalizable cross-chain intents.

article-image

Crypto and blockchain can provide a safer, fairer, more human-centric collaboration between AI and the rest of us

article-image

SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda says that the SEC needs to create a “pathway for compliance”

article-image

New EIP would resolve disagreements around the best path towards universal smart contract wallets by temporarily giving EOAs superpowers

article-image

Bitcoin could become “the supreme base settlement layer” as its DeFi capabilities grow, industry founder says

article-image

Ripple’s chief legal officer said that the new filing from the SEC is “more of the same”

article-image

More than ever before, crypto is unabashedly embracing its most reductionist and obvious purpose — turning everything into a game of buying low and selling high