On her Twitter page, the managing partner of Primitive Ventures, Dovey Wan, reports that the Chinese police have finally arrested the founders of the PlusToken Ponzi scheme that have robbed the investors of about $3 bln.
Some of the gang members still on the loose
Dovey Wan writes that the majority of the Bitcoin addresses that belonged to the dirty players were multisignature ones. The police have not yet got access to the wallets that contain the funds stolen from the investors.
This means that the rest of the suspects, who keep their parts of the signatures, might still be free.
As per the data from audit company Peckshield, in early July, part of the stolen funds went to the Bittrex and Huobi crypto exchanges.
In another tweet, Wan published two addressed connected with the PlusToken venture. One of them contains 74,000 BTC, the other holds $95,000 BTC.
Binance also involved
Dovey Wan adds that the accomplices of the arrested suspects are sending the stolen funds to the exchanges in relatively small portions – not more than 50-100 BTC. She urged Peckshield and an analytic firm Chainalysis to go deep into the issue and trace the movement of the funds as precisely as possible.
Also, as per Wan, rumours among Chinese trades have it that someone connected with PlusToken is constantly sending around 100 BTC to the Binance exchange.
What PlusToken did
In June, the founders of the PlusToken wallet got away with around $3 bln of user funds, which makes PlusToken one of the biggest exist scams and a Ponzi scheme at the moment.
The project was launched back in 2018 and was advertised as a decentralized solution and an international cryptocurrency project supported by a South Korean team. It was working mainly with investors from Asian countries, e.g. China, Japan, Russia, etc.
The company initially showed all signs of a Ponzi scheme, offering its customers a referral program and a chance to receive monthly returns of 6-19% on invested funds.