Travis Ford, 36, CEO and co-founder of Wolf Capital Crypto Trading, has been sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to running a $9.4 million crypto Ponzi scheme. A U.S. Department of Justice press release confirmed that Ford was also ordered to forfeit more than $1 million and pay $170,000 in restitution to defrauded investors.
Ford, based in Glenpool, Oklahoma, misled approximately 2,800 investors by promising unrealistic returns of 1–2% per day, equivalent to roughly 547% annually. From January to August 2023, he solicited investments through Wolf Capital’s website and various online platforms, claiming to be a sophisticated trader.
Court documents reveal Ford admitted he knew such returns were impossible to deliver consistently. Instead, the funds were misappropriated for his own and his co-conspirators’ benefit, leaving investors at a financial loss.
Ford’s guilty plea included one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Legal experts note that this sentence reflects growing scrutiny by U.S. authorities on digital currency investment schemes and their operators.
Similarly, Zhimin Qian, a 47-year-old, received a jail sentence of 11 years and eight months for masterminding a scheme that targeted more than 128,000 people in China. The largest seizure of Bitcoin ever noted in the United Kingdom consisted of 61,000 Bitcoins valued at $6.6 billion.
The “crypto queen” evaded the law for a long time and lived a lavish lifestyle throughout Europe. This was revealed through the reports given by the police of her stays at luxury hotels and the purchases of jewels and watches using the laundered cash.
She moved to the UK using a bogus identity, renting a pricey house in London that costs $23,000 a month and planning to buy a multimillion-pound property, all while cashing out her Bitcoin.
The court also unveiled the personal writings of the perpetrator, where she revealed that her dream was to be the queen of the so-called “Liberland” and to have meetings with the royals. Her accomplice, a national of Malaysia named Seng Hok Ling, 47, who helped her launder the cryptocurrency, got a sentence of four years and 11 months.
These instances go to show that the world is seeing a rise in actions taken against crypto fraud schemes. This includes small businesses within the U.S. and large-scale Ponzi operators within the European region.
As the experts advise, however, the gravity of the penalties addressed in these cases highlights the fact that financial impropriety of any kind within the crypto environment carries a serious risk of harsh penalties, including imprisonment and asset forfeitures.
Also Read: JPEX Crypto Fraud: 16 Arrested in Hong Kong’s Biggest Crypto Scam


