Pastor claims God made him steal $1.3M in crypto scam

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Eligio Regalado
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A Denver Pastor has been charged with civil fraud after stealing $1.3million of donations in a cryptocurrency scheme.

A statement released by the the Colorado Division of Securities said Eligio Regalado was charged with his wife Kaitlyn on Thursday January 17.

This was after the Colorado Attorney General’s Office had filed a civil complaint in the Denver District Court.

According to the Colorado Division of Securities, the pastor and his wife marketed their “practically worthless” cryptocurrency, INDXcoin, to Christian communities in Denver, telling them that “God told him people would become wealthy” if they invested.

The Colorado Attorney General’s Office in his complaint said INDXcoin was an online cryptocurrency exchange owned and operated by the Regalados, despite them having “no experience” in cryptocurrency.

INDXcoin was offered to Denver-area Christians through the Kingdom Wealth Exchange, the BBC had reported.

The NBC also disclosed that following the exposure of his scheme, the pastor insisted in a video statement that “the Lord told him to do it.”

In the video, Eligio Regalado admitted claims that he and his wife pocketed $1.3 million “are true.”

“Out of the $1.3 [million], half a million dollars went to the IRS [Internal Revenue Services], and a few hundred thousand dollars went to a home remodel the Lord told us to do,” Regalado said in the video.

According to reports by the BBC, the couple also allegedly spent their nearly 300 investors’ funds on a Range Rover, luxury handbags, jewelry, an au pair, boat rentals and snowmobile adventures.

Per the New York Times, Regalado said that he did not want investors to be “mad” at the prosecutors.

“They have to do this,” he said. “I mean, if you think about this: We sold a cryptocurrency with no clear exit. We did. We took God at his word.”

According to reports from the New York Times, the pastor further admitted that investors faced problems with the cryptocurrency exchange and were unable to withdraw their money.

Regalado insisted in the video that he still hoped that investors could get their money back, and that he believed “God is going to work a miracle in the financial sector.”

Colorado Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said: “We allege that Mr. Regalado took advantage of the trust and faith of his own Christian community and that he peddled outlandish promises of wealth to them when he sold them essentially worthless cryptocurrencies.”

He continued, “New coins and new exchanges are easy to create with open source code.  We want to remind consumers to be very skeptical.”

Eligio Regalado and wife have been scheduled to appear in Denver District Court next week.

Source: people.com