ATTENTION
— stealthbomber10 (@stealthbomber21) December 22, 2019
@hitsXBT, formerly known as LÈON, has exit scammed his Bitmex $BTC fund.
He had promised to send out his fund's "Xmas promo" profits by 15:30 UTC today.
No profits were sent. He has deleted all his TG secret chats and changed his account to this as a parting joke. pic.twitter.com/478I8dmPxQ
A Bitcoin Scam With Obvious Red Flags
The premise of LÉON’s Xmas Promo pool was simple. He asked investors to send him their bitcoins which he would lock up in his private wallet for a pre-specified period. He promised investors that he would trade with their bitcoins and return them the profit as per the agreed period. In return, LÉON would take a small cut for his commission. Not only that, but LÉON also baited small-time investors by promising them instant 300% returns on their deposits. LÉON explained the scheme by stating that he was taking a hefty cut from the deposits of whales and redistributing the amount among those with low deposits. Anybody depositing five BTC or more were categorized as ‘whales’ as per the Xmas Promo rule. Worth noting here is that several users on the cryptocurrency side of Twitter had warned investors that the scheme had all the ingredients of an exit scam. LÉON, who claimed to be a millionaire with a big Bitcoin stash, was called out on several occasions. Eventually, he made his Twitter account private, presumably to avoid any public conversations that could potentially discourage some of his clients/victims.As it turns out, despite the tell-tale signs of a possible scam, a large number of investors were successfully lured into the Xmas Promo pool.@hitsXBT "Multimillionaire" contacted me for an advertising job, I was thinking his "trading fund" and that was already a red flag, but wanted to play fool and see where he wanted to go and if he was legit or no. Telling me to speak in a private chat was the 2nd red flag pic.twitter.com/Epo847YA3C
— Walter Wyckoff (@walter_wyckoff) December 12, 2019
Telegram Support Group for Those Affected
The exact number of victims is not currently known, although speculations are rife that LÉON might have been able to get his hands on enough bitcoins that reach a total value of approximately several hundred thousands of dollars. According to some, the Xmas Promo pool had hundreds of BTC in deposits, although BeInCrypto is yet to independently verify those claims.Meanwhile, a Telegram group has been set up for the victims of the scam to get together and coordinate to raise a campaign to get their deposits back.The screenshots are in the chat history I uploaded to the dropbox link in the thread.
— stealthbomber10 (@stealthbomber21) December 23, 2019
I personally know one victim who lost 100 btc alone.
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