It remains to be seen if the investors of the Pune bitcoin scam stand any chance to get their money back
Nisha Raisoni first met Akash Sancheti as a prospective match for a relative’s daughter. But what Sancheti talked to her the most that day was about bitcoins. “He spoke passionately and convincingly,” said Raisoni, 46, a Pune based entrepreneur. “In the end, he did not impress me as prospective groom, but I liked his business.”
She liked it so much that she agreed to invest ₹1 lakh in Sancheti’s bitcoin business, Cloud Miners. And, by the end of August 2017, she had invested ₹13 lakh. “He had promised me 1.8 bitcoins for the investment in one bitcoin over a period of 18 months. He also told me that if I reinvested my monthly payouts, he would give me six bitcoins at the end of 18 months. I found the deal very lucrative,” said Raisoni.
She had full faith in him. “In November, he downloaded the CoinBank app on my phone, and told me that I could keep a track of my investments on it,” she said. “He even told me that if I brought more investors he would pay me ₹25 lakh a month. But, he never shared the user ID and password with me. As I started keeping track of my money, I realised that I was receiving MCAP, another cryptocurrency, not bitcoins.”
When she took it up with Sancheti, he told her that the company GainBitcoin, in which his Cloud Miners was a partner, had changed its policies, and the payouts would be as MCAP. “I was angry and upset, and I told him that I wanted my investment back at any cost. I kept asking, but he told me he did not have any money. He even stopped replying to my calls and messages,” she said.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 29, 2018-Ausgabe von THE WEEK.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 29, 2018-Ausgabe von THE WEEK.
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