BTCC / BTCC Square / decryptCO /
UK Slams Crypto Scammers with Jail Time After $2M Fake Consultancy Fraud

UK Slams Crypto Scammers with Jail Time After $2M Fake Consultancy Fraud

Author:
decryptCO
Published:
2025-07-08 14:30:50
15
3

UK Jails Duo for $2M Fake Crypto Consultancy Scam

Crypto con artists just got a brutal reality check—UK courts don’t play nice with fraudsters.

Two scammers promised investors the moon with a fake crypto consultancy, pocketing $2M before the house of cards collapsed. Now? They’re trading Lambo dreams for prison jumpsuits.

Lesson learned: If your ‘consultancy’ can’t survive a basic Google search, maybe stick to traditional Ponzi schemes—at least those have vintage charm.

Blurred lines

The case forms part of a wider sweep by UK authorities targeting financial crimes that blur the lines between regulated markets and loosely policed digital platforms.

Last week, a UK court sentenced two siblings to prison for orchestrating an insider trading scheme that netted nearly $1.35 million (£1 million) by exploiting gaps between traditional finance and crypto-style trading apps.

Siblings Redinel and Oerta Korfuzi have been sentenced to a combined 11 years in prison for insider trading and money laundering.

We’re committed to fighting financial crime and taking action against those who undermine the integrity of our markets.https://t.co/xs1qWxXnA7 pic.twitter.com/5kW3ovRV8W

— Financial Conduct Authority (@TheFCA) July 5, 2025

The case centered on Redinel Korfuzi, an analyst at Janus Henderson, who used his position to feed his sister advance notice of 13 confidential share placements. Authorities found the pair coordinated trades from their shared London flat during the lockdowns from the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

Using WhatsApp and Telegram to time short bets, the Korfuzis utilized CFD (Contract for Difference) apps and spread betting platforms that allowed users to bet on whether stock prices WOULD rise or fall without actually buying the shares.

The brother and sister duo "exploited their privileged position and the confidential inside information they had access to," Steve Smart, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight for the U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority, said in a statement. "They rigged the system to satisfy their greed."

Investigators alleged the two of spreading trades across multiple accounts, including one opened by Redinel’s personal trainer, to avoid detection. Only the matching IP address and synchronized trading patterns exposed the scope of the conspiracy.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) also uncovered $357,000 (£263,000) in unexplained cash, some of which was held in a West End SAFE deposit box.

The siblings claimed the funds came from Albanian workers sending remittances, but the jury rejected the explanation as fiction.

“Everything you worked for is now gone because you are and will remain convicted fraudsters,” Judge Milne KC wrote in sentencing comments.

While the two appeared to be "intelligent and financially aware individuals" and "knew exactly what they were doing," neither "has expressed any remorse," Judge Milne KC added.

Confiscation proceedings in both the Korfuzi and Bedi-Mavanga cases are ongoing. Decrypt has reached out to the FCA for comment and will update this article should they respond.

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.Your EmailGet it!Get it!

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users