The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has halted a fast-moving initial coin offering (ICO) that was seeking to raise up to $1 billion from thousands of investors to develop “the world’s first decentralized cryptocurrency bank”.
Dallas-based AriseBank was ordered to stop its ICO and refund investor proceeds after the SEC released a report stating that “it used social media, a celebrity endorsement, and other wide dissemination tactics to raise what it claims to be $600 million of its $1 billion goal in just two months” the agency said on Monday.
The US top regulator warned investors against throwing money into the crowdsale because the company intended to launch a cryptocurrency-based investment scheme without even attempting to follow US securities laws.
The SEC obtained an emergency asset freeze against AriseBank and filed charges against its co-founders Jared Rice and Stanley Ford, alleging that they sold securities claiming that investments in AriseBank would bring “a first-of-its-kind decentralized bank offering a variety of consumer-facing banking products and services using more than 700 different virtual currencies.”
AriseBank markets itself as a provider of a full service alternative financial system that combines the strengths of conventional and decentralized banks, a blockchain exchange, and a gold depository.
The SEC alleges that AriseBank falsely claimed that it had signed an agreement to buy the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insured bank, which has been in operation in the US for over a century. If it went well, the acquisition would give the crypto startup a full traditional banking license, as well as a global network of ATMs and debit cards. AriseBank also allegedly omitted to disclose the criminal background of key executives.
The Banking Commissioner of the state of Texas has also filed a non-appealable cease and desist order against AriseBank, .
AriseBank’s case is the third to be brought by the SEC’s new cyber unit, which was created in September to target violations involving distributed ledger technology and initial coin offerings as part of a new effort to fight cyber-crime.
Earlier last month, the SEC , who raised $15 million by soliciting investors from the US and Canada, with illegally profiting from defrauding customers through off-market investment pools.
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