This is a pretty dark story that really illustrates how dangerous the crypto space can get when fraud and organized crime intersect. Kevin Mirshahi, a 25-year-old who ran a crypto investment Telegram group called Crypto Paradise Island, was kidnapped on June 21, 2024, from a Montreal parking garage along with three others. Two of the victims were found alive the next day, but Mirshahi disappeared. By August, authorities confirmed the worst - he'd been murdered. His body turned up months later at Île-de-la-Visitation park in October.



But here's where it gets even more troubling. Before his death, Mirshahi was already under investigation for running what amounts to a textbook pump-and-dump scheme. The scheme centered around a token called Marsan (MRS), created by Antoine Marsan and Bastien Francoeur through their company Marsan Exchange. The token launched on April 14, 2021, and Mirshahi was paid in tokens to hype it to his followers.

The numbers tell the story. Marsan hit CAD $5.14 (around $3.67 USD) just three days after launch - classic pump behavior. Then Antoine Marsan and the other major holders cashed out on April 18, and the price collapsed to $0.39. Thousands of people got destroyed in that trade, especially the roughly 2,300 members of the group, many of them teenagers between 16 and 20 years old.

Quebec's investment regulator, the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), had been investigating Mirshahi's operation since 2021. They banned him from acting as a broker, prohibited him from securities trading, and ordered him to take down all his promotional posts. But he ignored it - kept running a Telegram group called Amir to keep pumping crypto investments.

What's wild is that despite the regulatory ban, Mirshahi continued operating. It shows how difficult it is to actually enforce these rules in the crypto space, especially when you're dealing with someone determined to keep going. The Antoine Marsan token situation became a cautionary tale about how quickly these schemes can turn predatory, particularly when targeting younger, less experienced investors.

This case is part of a bigger pattern emerging across Canada - cryptocurrency-linked crimes including kidnappings and violent attacks are on the rise. It's a reminder that the crypto world still has serious security and fraud problems that go way beyond just market volatility.
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