The Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday that it secured an emergency court order against an initial coin offering and its organizer who had claimed to have received approval from the agency.
According to the Oct. 11 statement, Reginald Buddy Ringgold allegedly claimed that the ICO was given the green light by regulators. Ringgold and BlockVest, the agency said, âwere using the SEC seal without permission, a violation of federal law, and falsely claiming their crypto fund was âlicensed and regulated.'â
âBlockvest and Ringgold also allegedly misrepresented Blockvestâs connections to a well-known accounting firm, and continued their fraudulent conduct even after the National Futures Association (NFA) sent them a cease-and-desist letter to stop them from using the NFAâs seal and from making false claims about their status with that organization,â the SEC said in a statement.
In June, BlockVestâs website referred to âreceiving Reg A+ approval from the SEC,â and in April had filed with the agency for an exempted sale of $100 million worth of âBLV tokens,â public records show.
A hearing is scheduled for Oct. 18, the SEC said, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California.
âWe allege that this ICO is using both the SEC seal and a made-up crypto regulatory authority to trick investors into believing the ICO was approved by regulators,â Robert Cohen, who leads the SEC Enforcement Divisionâs Cyber Unit, was quoted as saying. âThe SEC does not endorse investment products and investors should be highly skeptical of any claims suggesting otherwise.â
The developments represent the second court action from the SEC on the ICO front. As CoinDesk reported Wednesday, the agency is seeking to enforce a subpoena as it probes alleged pump-and-dump practices and claims about a different $100 million ICO.
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