Turkish investors lost $119 Million in an alleged Dogecoin Mining Scam

Guest Contributor
By Guest Contributor 3 Min Read
Turkish investors lost $119 Million in an alleged Dogecoin Mining Scam
Dogecoin, DOGE Cuban Musk
  • An alleged Dogecoin (DOGE) mining scam happened in Turkey.
  • The scheme’s suspected operator has gone missing with $119 million worth of Dogecoin. 
  • Investors were promised to get returns of  100% in 40 days. 

YEREVAN (CoinChapter.com) — On August 23rd, Turkish local channel TV100 reported that police identified a pseudonym “Turgut V” as the alleged mastermind behind a Dogecoin scam. It scammed people off 350 million DOGE worth around $119 million.

One of the investors said that the scammer promised him 100% return in 40 days by investing his money in a Dogecoin mining operation.

- Advertisement -

For the first three months, the operation was running and paying returns as promised. But during the fourth month, the total value locked reached 350 million Dogecoin, and that’s when the money and the alleged scammer vanished.

According to Turkish authorities, 1,500 investors transferred DOGE to Turgut throughout the three months the scam was operating. As reported, Turgut had 11 associates who are under investigation.

A typical cloud mining scam ft Dogecoin

Dogecoin mining is almost the same as bitcoin mining.

- Advertisement -

Both networks use proof-of-work to create new coins. In this process, participants or miners must validate transactions by solving complex equations. With more powerful pieces of equipment, the chance of solving the equation and getting the reward, which is all the new cryptocurrencies in the mined block, goes higher.

Turgut promoted Dogecoin mining and managed to lure people into transferring DOGE to their fraudulent scheme by organizing one-on-one networking meetings with them at luxurious venues and using a Telegram group.

The scammer told Investors that he would spend the raised capital on getting new Dogecoin mining equipment; therefore, they could get a good profit out of it.

Turkish prosecutors are now carrying out an ongoing investigation to find the suspects. Authorities also banned Turgut from leaving the country. 

Dogecoin, also known as memecoin, is the seventh-largest cryptocurrency, with $36.25 billion.

DOGE creators originally wanted to make a payment system a joke, but now it has real value. It even has its foundation for improving payment methods. One of the Dogecoin Foundation’s strategic advisors is Ethereum co-founder Vitalin Buterin and a representative of Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO.

Guest Contributor

A guest author represents the interests of the company he or she is promoting in his or her articles and is not part of CoinChapter’s editorial staff. CoinChapter is not responsible for articles published by guest authors. The opinions expressed in articles by guest authors do not necessarily reflect the views of CoinChapter. The content published by guest authors is not investment advice.

1 Comment

One response to “Turkish investors lost $119 Million in an alleged Dogecoin Mining Scam”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *