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Mashinsky faces 20 years in prison: the judicial outcome of the Celsius scandal
The Celsius case, one of the biggest failures in the cryptocurrency industry, is reaching a decisive turning point. Alex Mashinsky, founder and former CEO of the now-collapsed lending platform, faces a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison. This severe penalty reflects the scale of the fraud that shook the digital assets sector and left thousands of investors without resources.
The financial abyss: how Celsius sank
Everything changed on June 12, 2022, when Celsius abruptly suspended withdrawals for its customers. On that day, approximately $4.7 billion in crypto assets became inaccessible to more than 1.7 million users. The platform, once considered a leader in decentralized finance services, collapsed within hours, leaving clients facing massive losses.
The accusations against Mashinsky: deliberate deception
The U.S. Department of Justice describes Mashinsky’s actions as “a system of lies and self-enrichment spread over several years.” Court documents filed in April reveal that he personally enriched himself by about $48 million through Celsius’s fraudulent schemes. Even more seriously, Mashinsky allegedly actively misled clients about the safety of their funds and the platform’s viability, while he was fully aware of the system’s financial instability.
The public prosecutor argues that Mashinsky’s decisions were not management errors or market misfortunes, but deliberate and calculated choices aimed at maximizing his personal gains at the expense of platform users.
From admission to sentencing: confirmation of established guilt
In December 2024, Mashinsky admitted his direct involvement in criminal activities. This confession confirmed the true extent of the damage: losses would exceed $550 million, surpassing even the initial estimates by the DOJ. Mashinsky’s guilty plea unequivocally establishes that the fraud was not accidental but organized and intentional.
As the court rules on the sentence, this case underscores the need for stricter regulation in the cryptocurrency industry and greater accountability for platform executives. Mashinsky’s case will likely serve as an important precedent for future prosecutions of sector fraudsters.