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HashFlare Ponzi Founders Get Time Served for $577M Scheme

August 13, 2025
in Crypto News
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HashFlare Ponzi Founders Get Time Served for 7M Scheme
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Crypto Journalist

Anas Hassan

Crypto Journalist

Anas Hassan

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Anas is a crypto native journalist and SEO writer with over five years of writing experience covering blockchain, crypto, DeFi, and emerging tech.

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Last updated: 

August 13, 2025


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HashFlare Ponzi Founders Get Time Served for 7M Scheme

Two Estonian nationals avoided additional prison time for orchestrating one of crypto’s largest Ponzi schemes (HashFlare) after receiving sentences matching the 16 months they already served in custody.

Sergei Potapenko and Ivan Turõgin, both 40, were sentenced by U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik for their roles in the $577 million HashFlare fraud that victimized hundreds of thousands of investors worldwide between 2015 and 2019.

U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik ordered each defendant to pay $25,000 in fines and to complete 360 hours of community service during their supervised release in Estonia.

The sentencing incorporated forfeiture of over $450 million in seized assets for victim compensation, while prosecutors sought ten-year prison terms and are considering an appeal.

HashFlare Ponzi Founders Get Time Served for $577M Crypto Scheme, Escape Additional Jail
Sergei Potapenko and Ivan Turõgin (Source: Postimees)

The $577 Million Mining Mirage

HashFlare marketed itself as a crypto mining service selling contracts that promised customers shares of profits from blockchain validation activities. Court documents revealed the operation used fake online dashboards showing false mining activity while lacking the computing capacity to mine the vast majority of the claimed cryptocurrency.

The duo’s equipment performed Bitcoin mining at less than one percent of its purported computing power, according to the Justice Department’s official press release.

When investors requested withdrawals, Potapenko and Turõgin either resisted payments or used newly purchased cryptocurrency rather than actual mining rewards.

The defendants diverted millions to purchase real estate, luxury vehicles, expensive jewelry, and over a dozen chartered private jet trips while victims suffered major losses.

Their scheme extended beyond HashFlare to include Polybius Bank, a fictitious “virtual currency bank” that raised $25 million through a 2017 ICO but never operated as an actual financial institution.

The 2023 arrests triggered complex extradition proceedings before Estonia approved their transfer to face U.S. charges in early 2024.

Both men pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud in February, agreeing to forfeit over $400 million in assets while facing a maximum 20-year sentence.

“These defendants were operating a classic Ponzi scheme, involving a glitzy asset: a mirage of cryptocurrency mining,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Teal Luthy Miller.

Lenient Sentences Defy Emerging Pattern of Harsh Crypto Penalties

The HashFlare defendants’ 16-month sentences appear inconsistent with an intensifying judicial trend toward severe punishment for cryptocurrency crimes, regardless of a scheme’s size or complexity.

For instance, Nicholas Truglia’s sentence jumped from 18 months to 12 years for a $22 million SIM-swapping scheme after he failed to pay restitution, with the judge condemning his “splendor” lifestyle while owing victims millions.

Similarly, former rugby player Shane Moore was sentenced to 30 months for a $900,000 mining fraud, receiving nearly double the HashFlare defendants’ custody time for a scheme worth less than 0.2% of their operation.

The sentencing disparity becomes more pronounced when compared with non-crypto financial fraud cases, where defendants typically receive years-long sentences for schemes involving far smaller amounts than HashFlare’s half-billion-dollar operation.

Mohammed Azharuddin Chhipa received 30 years for funneling $185,000 in cryptocurrency to ISIS operatives, a sentence nearly twenty times longer than HashFlare’s founders despite involving vastly smaller amounts.

The contrast also extends beyond specific cases to prosecutorial approach, with Dwayne Golden receiving eight years for a $40 million Ponzi scheme and prosecutors seeking 20 years for former Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky in a $550 million fraud case.

Legal experts question whether the defendants’ cooperation, asset forfeiture, or other undisclosed factors influenced the unusually lenient outcome for such a massive international fraud.

However, the Justice Department’s consideration of an appeal suggests internal disagreement with the sentence’s proportionality, though appeals of criminal sentences face high legal hurdles and uncertain outcomes.


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