
The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a compensation program for victims of the $4 billion OneCoin crypto fraud, using assets forfeited by the OneCoin project’s architects.
According to a Monday press release, the remission program launched by the U.S. Department of Justice is open to all victims who purchased the fraudulent OneCoin cryptocurrency between 2014 and 2019, with the Criminal Division’s Money Laundering, Narcotics and Forfeiture Section handling the compensation process.
Victims who suffered losses from investing in the fraudulent OneCoin project have been urged to obtain a petition form online at www.onecoinremission.com. Victims may also call, email, or write to the Remission Administrator to request that a petition form be sent to them, and they must do so before the June 30 deadline.
The planned compensation has drawn strong positive comments from the public, with many applauding the Department of Justice for taking this step. Reacting to this news, Jay Clayton, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said his office will continue working to seize criminal proceeds and prioritize returning money to victims.
“With the unwavering support from the Department of Justice, the FBI maintains its commitment to returning these stolen funds to their rightful owners,” said James C. Barnacle Jr, the FBI assistant director in charge of the case.
“Our office will continue its investigative pursuit of these criminal fraudsters, especially in locating Ruja Ignatova, an FBI Top Ten Fugitive, alongside our partners at the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation and the Southern District of New York,” Barnacle added. He also urged the public to provide any information that could lead to the arrest of Ruja Ignatova, OneCoin’s alleged mastermind.
OneCoin was a fraudulent cryptocurrency project founded in 2014 by Ruja Ignatova, often referred to as the Cryptoqueen, alongside Karl Sebastian Greenwood. It was often referred to as the “Bitcoin killer” and was launched and marketed as a simpler, safer, and more accessible alternative to Bitcoin.
Although marketed as a cryptocurrency project, it was far from a legitimate cryptocurrency and was run like a classic Ponzi or pyramid scheme.
Despite the team falsely claiming that it had its own private blockchain and mining facilities in Bulgaria and Hong Kong, OneCoin fell short of being a cryptocurrency, with no decentralized public ledger and it was not tradeable on cryptocurrency exchanges.
Investors also had to buy expensive educational packages priced anywhere between €100 and over €100,000, with some spending up to €225,000 on these packages that were largely plagiarized from Wikipedia and other online content. The more investors spent on these packages, the more OneCoins they purchased, and the more they recruited new members, the higher their commissions.
This continued until the OneCoin marketplace temporarily shut down in early 2016 under the guise of carrying out upgrades and maintenance. The so called upgrade lasted several months, during which Ignatova, the project’s founder, disappeared in 2017.
What followed was a series of raids and arrests targeting the project’s executives, including Sebastian Greenwood, OneCoin’s co founder, Irina Dilkinska, an executive, and Konstantin Ignatov, Ruja’s brother, as well as the seizure of several of the project’s assets.
Image credit: fbi.gov
Ruja Ignatova remains a fugitive and is still on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list, with a $5 million reward offered for information leading to her arrest. Europol is also searching for her.

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has warned crypto users about a fake token on the Tron blockchain impersonating the agency.
In a post on its New York X account, the FBI said some Tron users have received messages from scammers posing as the agency, asking them to complete an anti-money laundering verification to avoid having their assets frozen and falsely claiming their wallets are under investigation.
The FBI cautioned against falling for such scams. “If you receive a token from an account with the details below, do not provide any identifying information to any website associated with the token,” the agency said.
Users who have already sent their personal information to the scammers were urged to file a complaint with the Internet Crime Complaint Center.
The launch of the fake FBI token is one of several crypto phishing scams that have emerged in recent months. These scams often involve impersonating recognized government agencies, companies, or public figures, tricking users into giving up their personal credentials.
According to Scam Sniffer, about 106,106 victims were affected by crypto phishing scams in 2025, resulting in losses of approximately $83.85 million.
Although this represents a significant drop compared to the $494 million in losses and 332,000 victims recorded the previous year, phishing remains widely used by attackers, especially with the growing use of AI-generated phishing campaigns.
In 2024, the FBI created a fake artificial intelligence–related token, called NexFundAI, an Ethereum-based cryptocurrency designed to catch scammers.
The NexFundAI token was part of Operation “Token Mirrors,” launched to identify and expose fraudulent market makers and manipulators, including those involved in wash trading and pump-and-dump schemes.
The operation was successful, as it led to the arrest of more than 18 individuals and the seizure of several million dollars from the suspects.