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California resident faces 25 years in prison for operating an unlicensed exchange and laundering $13 million.

The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has issued a warning against the rise in romance scams in the San Fra
The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has issued a warning against the rise in romance scams in the San Francisco Bay Area.

49-year-old peer-to-peer crypto trader, Hugo Sergio Mejia, has agreed to plead guilty to charges of money laundering and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. The U.S. Attorney’s Office accuses the California resident of using a suite of limited liability corporations to conceal his operations’ true nature while exchanging cash for Bitcoins over a period spanning more than two years. The complaint accuses Mejia of transferring funds between Bitcoin and U.S. dollars worth at least $13 million for clients from May 2018 and September 2020 using his companies Worldwide Secure Communications, World Secure Data, and The HODL Group.

Law enforcement caught Mejia red-handed.

According to the proposed plea agreement, Mejia negotiated with a client who was cooperating with law enforcement to exchange Bitcoin for tens of thousands of dollars in cash between May 2019 and March 2020. Despite the client informing Mejia that his primary customer was an Australian methamphetamine buyer during a meeting in March 2020, Meija was willing to proceed with the transaction. The complaint states Mejia carried out transactions worth more than a quarter of a million dollars for the client. “Mejia and the client who was working with law enforcement conducted five Bitcoin-cash transactions that cumulatively exceeded $250,000, the plea agreement states.”

Mejia has agreed to forfeit almost $234,000 in cash and approximately $95,500 in crypto.

As part of his plea deal, Mejia has agreed to forfeit almost $234,000 in cash and approximately $95,500 in cryptocurrency and metals that were found at his different residences in California. The deal also mandates that from now on, Meija will “maintain, at most, one virtual currency wallet, and that one wallet shall be used for all personal transactions, limited to only using and possessing open public blockchain virtual currencies and restricted from using privacy-based blockchain virtual currencies.”

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