Gilbert Armenta Receives Five-Year Prison Term for OneCoin Money Laundering

The ex-partner of Ruja Ignatova, the founder of the fraudulent OneCoin scheme, has been sentenced to significant prison time for his role in concealing illicit proceeds from the billion-dollar scam. Gilbert Armenta, 59, received a five-year federal prison sentence from the Southern District of New York (SDNY) for washing approximately $300 million in funds stolen from OneCoin investors. His conviction marks a major enforcement victory in the ongoing effort to prosecute key figures behind one of crypto’s most notorious Ponzi schemes.

The $300 Million Money Trail and Illicit Purchases

According to Bloomberg Law, Gilbert Armenta’s criminal conduct extended far beyond simple concealment of stolen funds. After successfully laundering $300 million from the OneCoin fraud, Armenta used the proceeds to purchase high-end assets, including a luxury jet aircraft. He also engaged in additional crimes—bribing Mexican business entities and gambling away funds stolen directly from scheme victims. His defense team attempted to portray him as a victim of manipulation, claiming he fell under the romantic influence of the “Cryptoqueen” and was subjected to invasive surveillance.

The initial investigation suggested Armenta could face up to seven years in prison. However, his 2018 guilty plea to charges of money laundering, wire fraud, and extortion resulted in a reduced sentence. Notably, after reaching an agreement with authorities, Armenta violated the terms by selling the luxury jet and misappropriating a $5 million check—actions that underscored the challenge prosecutors face in handling white-collar criminals.

Armenta has requested to serve his sentence at FCI Miami Federal Prison, a minimum-security facility, though the court has not yet ruled on this request. Matthew Lee, founder of the public interest watchdog Inner City Press, has closely documented Armenta’s case and highlighted the complex web of financial crimes involved.

OneCoin: The Four-Billion-Dollar Cryptocurrency Deception

The OneCoin scheme represents one of the largest cryptocurrency frauds in history. Launched in Bulgaria in 2014, the operation systematically defrauded millions of investors across multiple countries by promising returns on digital asset investments. The scheme operated under a carefully designed structure that appeared legitimate but functioned as a classic pyramid.

Investors were solicited to purchase “educational packages” for cryptocurrency trading, with price points ranging from €100 to €118,000. In exchange, they received OneCoin tokens, which theoretically could be converted to real currency on an internal marketplace. However, this marketplace—the linchpin of the operation—imposed severe daily selling restrictions that prevented investors from actually liquidating their holdings. When the platform closed for “maintenance” in March 2016, reopening only in January 2017, it became increasingly clear that the entire system was designed to trap capital.

Despite these red flags, OneCoin operators continued soliciting fresh investments throughout its operation. Regulatory authorities in Bulgaria, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Latvia, and Croatia issued repeated public warnings that OneCoin was likely fraudulent, urging citizens to avoid participation. Nevertheless, the scheme succeeded in stealing more than $4 billion before its eventual collapse. This massive scale made OneCoin not just a financial crime but an international crisis affecting victims across numerous jurisdictions.

The Hunt for the Cryptoqueen: Ruja Ignatova Still at Large

Ruja Ignatova, the Bulgarian founder and primary architect of OneCoin, remains one of the world’s most wanted fugitives. The FBI added her to its official “Ten Most Wanted Fugitives” list and offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to her capture. Known as “the woman who deceived the world” by the BBC, Ignatova was last sighted in Athens, Greece in 2017, and her current whereabouts remain unknown.

Speculation about Ignatova’s location has become a subject of intense investigation and media scrutiny. Some sources have suggested she escaped with a substantial portion of the stolen proceeds and may be hiding aboard a luxury yacht in the Mediterranean Sea—a location that presents unique jurisdictional challenges for law enforcement, as authorities cannot conduct operations within twelve nautical miles of international waters.

Frank Schneider, former chief of Luxembourg’s intelligence services, has expressed a darker theory: “I suspect she was murdered, and while I hope not, there is nothing to prove otherwise.” This assessment reflects the genuine uncertainty surrounding the fugitive’s fate.

A significant development emerged when a London penthouse worth approximately $15 million—purchased years earlier under Ignatova’s name—resurfaced on the real estate market. Prosecutors in Bielefeld, Germany charged Ignatova’s German lawyer with money laundering for facilitating transfers exceeding $21 million to cover this London property purchase and a second apartment in the same complex. The asking price was subsequently reduced to roughly $13 million, though the estate agent Knight Frank declined to confirm whether the property ultimately sold, stating only that it had “complied fully at all times with its legal and regulatory requirements.”

The reappearance of this high-value asset has led some observers to speculate that Ignatova may still be alive and managing her wealth through intermediaries—a possibility that keeps the investigation active and the reward active.

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