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Ex-Goliath Ventures CEO Pleads Guilty in $400M Crypto Ponzi Scheme



A former CEO of Goliath Ventures, Christopher Alexander Delgado, has entered a guilty plea in the U.S. Department of Justice’s cryptocurrency fraud case that prosecutors say relied on investor money to sustain promised returns. The DOJ said the scheme raised at least $400 million from investors through what it described as digital asset “liquidity pools,” with Delgado admitting to wire fraud conspiracy and related offenses.



According to the DOJ, Goliath marketed monthly returns between January 2023 and January 2026. Prosecutors contend that investor funds were not used as represented, but instead were diverted to pay earlier participants, handle withdrawal requests, cover personal luxury spending, and fund business events.



Key takeaways



  • Delgado pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, along with wire fraud and money laundering counts tied to the Goliath Ventures scheme.

  • Prosecutors said Goliath promised monthly returns from crypto liquidity pools while using new investor money for withdrawals, payments, and expenses.

  • The plea agreement states the scheme resulted in at least $250 million in investor losses and includes forfeiture of extensive luxury assets.

  • Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 8, with Delgado facing substantial prison time if convicted on the fraud and money laundering counts.

  • The case has also raised questions about how financial institutions handled Goliath-related transactions, including litigation claims involving major banks and crypto custody.



What the DOJ says Delgado admitted


In a Tuesday announcement, the DOJ said Delgado pleaded guilty to a set of charges stemming from the cryptocurrency investment operation. Prosecutors described a program that promised regular returns using digital asset liquidity pools, spanning January 2023 through January 2026.



Delgado’s plea included admissions that the funds collected from investors were used for purposes inconsistent with the representations made to customers. The DOJ said money from the scheme went toward paying earlier investors and processing withdrawal requests, while also being used for luxury spending and to finance business events.



Under the plea agreement, Delgado admitted that investor losses linked to the scheme totaled at least $250 million. The agreement also requires forfeiture of a portfolio of luxury assets, according to the DOJ.



Forfeiture and sentencing exposure


The DOJ said Delgado agreed to surrender eight properties, 11 vehicles, and more than 50 luxury bags and wallets, along with at least 29 pieces of jewelry. The forfeiture list also includes bank accounts and crypto wallets identified by prosecutors.



From a potential punishment standpoint, the DOJ’s filing indicates that each fraud count carries up to 20 years in prison, while money laundering carries up to 10 years. Delgado’s sentencing has been set for Oct. 8.



Apology on television precedes the plea


Delgado’s guilty plea follows a public apology and television appearance that drew attention to the case. Earlier this year, on May 12, Delgado appeared in an interview with Florida television station WFTV, where he acknowledged he had let investors down and said he had returned to the U.S. and was cooperating with authorities.



In that interview, Delgado claimed that only about $160,000 remained in the company’s bank account at the time of his arrest. He also said other former colleagues were involved in the broader operation.



Scrutiny expands to banks and payment rails


Beyond Delgado’s plea, the Goliath case has drawn scrutiny regarding the financial institutions that processed transactions connected to the scheme. On March 12, investors reportedly filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase, alleging that the bank ignored suspicious activity and allowed Goliath to route investor funds through its accounts.



That lawsuit, as described in earlier coverage, claimed that roughly $253 million moved through a JPMorgan account. It further alleged that about $123 million later transferred to Goliath’s wallets at Coinbase. A separate federal complaint, according to the DOJ, also identified flows involving Bank of America and transfers directly to Coinbase wallets.



For market participants and builders, these allegations underscore a recurring challenge in crypto markets: even when digital assets are involved, traditional banking channels can remain critical bottlenecks for detecting suspicious activity—or, if the system fails, for facilitating fraudulent structures.



With sentencing approaching on Oct. 8, investors and compliance professionals will likely focus on what the court order clarifies about the scheme’s mechanics, the scale of losses, and how payments moved between bank accounts and crypto wallets. The plea does not end the broader questions raised by parallel claims about financial institutions’ role, and future rulings could further shape expectations for safeguards across both traditional and on-chain settlement pathways.



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