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Turkey: Cryptocurrency boss who fled 'with $2bn' arrested in Albania

Extradition procedures are underway for Faruk Fatih Ozer, whose Thodex exchange is accused of scamming thousands of investors
A banknote and coin imitations of the Bitcoin crypto currency (AFP/file photo)

The founder of cryptocurrency exchange Thodex, suspected of having fled Turkey with the assets of his clients, has been arrested in Albania, the Turkish interior ministry said on Tuesday.

Turkey issued an international arrest warrant in April last year for fugitive businessman Faruk Fatih Ozer, who fled with a reported $2bn in investors' assets.

Tirana had informed Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu that Ozer "was arrested in Vlora, Albania", the ministry said. It added that "extradition procedures to Turkey have been initiated".

Ozer, 28, is being held in the Albanian city of Elbasan, its prosecutor Kreshnik Ajazi told the Sarajevo-based Balkan Investigative Reporting Network.

Crypto scam

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The Thodex exchange used aggressive campaigns to lure investors. It first pledged to distribute luxury cars, through a flashy advertising campaign featuring famous Turkish models.

But the exchange suspended trading in April last year after posting a mysterious message days earlier saying it needed five days to deal with an unspecified outside investment.

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The Istanbul-based Thodex went dark after running a promotional campaign that sold Dogecoins at one-quarter the price at which they were trading on other exchanges.

But the exchange locked in those investments and did not allow the coins to be either sold or converted into other cryptos.

Media reports said the exchange shut down while holding at least $2bn from 391,000 investors. More than 60 people linked to the company were arrested.

The manhunt for Ozer came as Turkey's crypto market started to unravel. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government warned of the risks and announced plans to rein in the digital currency market.

Cryptocurrency had proved a way for many Turks to preserve their savings during a steep drop in the value of the lira.

A number of governments, including those of India, China and Russia, have said they will introduce tighter regulation on cryptocurrencies amid concerns at their potential use for criminal purposes and over volatile trading.

In recent years, the crypto sector has benefited from a vast infusion of cash due to easy-money policies by the world's biggest central banks. However, rampant inflation has sparked tighter monetary policy across the globe, helping to send the industry crashing.

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