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Just saw this case that really highlights how messy the NFT space got during the boom years. Two guys from California, Gabriel Hay and Gavin Mayo, both 23, got charged in December for running one of the bigger fraud schemes I've come across recently. We're talking over 22 million in losses here.
What caught my attention is how calculated this was. These two didn't just throw something together overnight. From May 2021 all the way to May 2024, they were systematically launching fake NFT projects, with "Vault of Gems" and "Faceless" being the main ones. They'd promise all these exclusive benefits to investors, claiming Vault of Gems was the first NFT project actually backed by real assets. Total lies, obviously.
The playbook was pretty standard scam stuff, honestly. Fake roadmaps, promotional BS, the whole package designed to convince people to throw serious money at these projects. Once they had the funds, Gavin Mayo and Gabriel Hay just ghosted the projects completely. Investors were left holding worthless tokens and broken promises.
What's interesting is how long it took to catch them. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's HSI unit was tracking this for years before finally uncovering the network and making the arrests. One of the officials, Katrina Berger, made a point that stuck with me: "For three years, the defendants lied to investors to steal millions of dollars, and these crimes are not without victims despite the absence of violence." That's a good way to frame it actually.
They're facing conspiracy and wire fraud charges which carry up to 20 years, plus some additional harassment charges on top. The case is a solid reminder of how the NFT space became a playground for this kind of sophisticated fraud. These weren't unsophisticated scammers, they were methodical about it. Worth keeping in mind when evaluating any new NFT projects, honestly.