Attorney General Securities Division Bars Maryland Cryptocurrency Company and Its Owners From Operating in Maryland

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Owners Fined $140,000 for Violating Maryland Securities Act

BALTIMORE (July 28, 2021)
- Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh today announced that his office’s Securities Division has issued a Final Order against La Tanya Davis of Silver Spring, Andrea King-Chang of Owings Mills, and their company, Ether Investment and Trading Group, LLC (together EITG) for violations of the Maryland Securities Act in connection with their involvement in a fraudulent offering of unregistered Initial Coin Offering (ICO) securities. The Final Order bars Davis, King-Chang, and their company from the securities and investment advisory industry and imposes fines jointly and individually totaling $140,000.

Using social media and its website www.ethertradecoin.io, EITG announced its intention to launch an ICO for a digital asset, Ethercoin, and published and distributed a white paper describing the Ethercoin business model and plans for the ICO. EITG used these and other offering and promotional materials to solicit investors in the United States and abroad, by among other things, making promises of triple returns to early “seed capital” investors.

In the white paper, EITG claimed that Ethercoin was developed by a group of cryptocurrency enthusiasts who recognized the need for a cryptocurrency that has low volatility and is backed by a tangible asset, in this case real estate. The Ethercoin team supposedly comprised hedge fund traders and developers with over 30 years of combined investing and trading experience across global financial markets.

“Investment opportunities that are difficult to research or determine value or risk, are a red flag,” said Attorney General Frosh. “Before handing over your hard-earned money, check with our Securities Division to verify the status of an investment or promoter. Get rich quick schemes are often a quick way to lose your money.”

According to the Final Order, which contains Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, EITG, Davis, and King-Chang violated the antifraud provisions of Maryland securities law by, among other things, failing to disclose material information relating to the offering, including disclosures related to the repayment of invested funds, profitability, risk, use of invested funds, and that the investments were being offered and sold in violation of applicable laws through unregistered agents.

As with other Final Orders, the Respondents have the right to appeal the order within 30 days to the circuit court. In making today’s announcement, Attorney General Frosh thanked Assistant Attorney General Arzhang Navai of the Securities Division for his work on the case.

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As of today, there are 5,827 crypto currencies and/or tokens listed on https://coinmarketcap.com/

All but maybe the top 100 are utterly useless money grabs. Many involve pump and dump operations where the coin founders pay social media influencers to pump this stuff to their followers in exchange for some payola. As soon as the price starts to skyrocket, the early "investors" sell. Usually within hours the price dumps and all of the suckers are out of their "investment."

A recent crypto pump-n-dump scam was highlighted by a scam investigator on YouTube known as CoffeeZilla. Some gamer boy influencers came up with a coin called "Save the Children" and pulled a scam just as described above. This is not the first one they perpetrated. It was the name that caught the attention of the sleuth. In the end, 2 gamers were implicated as the masterminds. One has since sold his stuff and returned to the UK. These guys were members of a large gamer company whose influencers lived together in expensive houses and generated content for their millions of followers on YouTube and social media. The 2, and a few others, have since been booted from the company. Law enforcement is not currently involved to anyone's knowledge.




Aside from all of the low-lifes, cryptocurrencies are here to stay and many of the legit ones have minted many millionaires and even a few billionaires---many in their 20's and 30's.
 
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