U.S. SEC sues Jake Paul, Lindsay Lohan, Soulja Boy, other celebrities over crypto sales

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday charged Chinese cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun with fraud, and accused eight celebrities including actress Lindsay Lohan and rapper Soulja Boy with illegally promoting his crypto assets.
Sun and his companies Tron Foundation, BitTorrent Foundation and Rainberry were accused of having since August 2017 schemed to distribute billions of crypto assets known as Tronix (TRX) and BitTorrent (BTT) and artificially inflated trading volume.
He was also accused of concealing payment to celebrities to promote TRX and BTT on social media accounts, misleading the public into thinking they had "unbiased interest in TRX and BTT, and were not merely paid spokespersons."
The SEC said Sun's activity generated tens of millions of U.S. dollars of illegal profit at other investors' expense.
"This case demonstrates again the high risk investors face when crypto asset securities are offered and sold without proper disclosure," SEC Chair Gary Gensler said in a statement.
Sun did not immediately respond to a request for comment via Twitter. A lawyer for him could not immediately be identified.
The other celebrities charged included the singers Akon, Austin Mahone and Ne-Yo, social media personality and boxer Jake Paul, rapper Lil Yachty and porn actress Kendra Lust.
All but Soulja Boy and Mahone agreed to settle, without admitting wrongdoing, and together paid more than US$400,000.
Andrew Brettler, a lawyer for Lohan, said the actress did not know about the disclosure requirements until last March.
"From the outset, she cooperated with the SEC's investigation and ultimately agreed to disgorge the small amount of money she received and paid a fine to resolve this matter," her attorney Andrew Brettler said in an emailed statement.
A lawyer for Kendra Lust declined to comment. Lawyers for the other celebrities did not respond immediately to requests for comment.
The SEC has been ratcheting up efforts to crack down on the crypto industry, which Gensler has called a "Wild West" riddled with misconduct. Its efforts gathered pace after November's collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried's cryptocurrency exchange FTX.
In its complaint filed in Manhattan federal court, the SEC said Sun sold TRX and BTT as securities, and thus their sale needed to be registered with the agency.
It said Sun inflated apparent trading volume in TRX through extensive "wash trading," involving simultaneous or near-simultaneous purchases and sales with no real change in ownership.
From at least April 2018 to February 2019, Sun ordered employees to conduct hundreds of thousands of wash trades between two accounts he controlled, the SEC said.
By creating a false and misleading appearance of legitimate trading, Sun made it easier to sell TRX while maintaining stable prices, and generated $31 million of proceeds from illegal, unregistered offers and sales of TRX, the SEC said.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice and Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Lisa Shumaker and Lincoln Feast.)
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