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Crypto influencer sentenced to 45 months in prison for wire fraud

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Thomas John Sfraga, also known as “TJ Stone,” received 45 months in prison for wire fraud and was ordered to pay more than $1.3 million in forfeiture as part of a scheme targeting crypto investors.

In a March 14 notice, the US Justice Department said Sfraga was sentenced in the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York (EDNY) for wire fraud following a May 2024 guilty plea. Court filings stated that the influencer and podcaster claimed he was the owner of businesses — including Vandelay Contracting, a name based on a running joke from the television series Seinfeld — and the emcee of many crypto events in New York City.

“[…] Sfraga convinced a victim to invest in a fictitious cryptocurrency ‘virtual wallet,’” said the Justice Department. “He promised the victims returns on their investments as high as 60% in three months. In reality, however, Sfraga used the money entrusted to him by the victims for his own benefit, to pay expenses, and to pay earlier victims and business associates.”

Sfraga’s case was one of many involving crypto-related crimes continuing to be pursued in the jurisdiction following the appointment of John Durham as interim US Attorney by President Donald Trump. Braden John Karony, former CEO of SafeMoon, who also faces EDNY criminal charges, requested in February that his criminal trial for securities fraud conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy be pushed based on the administration’s approach to crypto enforcement. 

The “Seinfeldian” scheme, according to Durham, was not the first time the crypto industry was connected to the popular sitcom. Comedian Larry David, co-creator of the show, starred in a Super Bowl ad for defunct cryptocurrency exchange FTX in 2022. He later said he was “an idiot” for endorsing the company and lost a lot of money after the price of specific tokens dropped.

Related: Why comedian TJ Miller wants to be a trustworthy face for Bitcoin

Since Trump took office on Jan. 20, some high-profile defendants in criminal cases involving cryptocurrency have reportedly been looking into appealing to the US president for a pardon. Among those reportedly seeking pardons were former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, currently serving a 25-year sentence following a 2023 conviction, and former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, who served a four-month sentence in 2024 — though he denied reports of a potential pardon.

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The Nobitex dilemma: How Iran’s biggest crypto exchange stays off the OFAC blacklist

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Iran entered the final night of February 2026 under a near-total internet shutdown. In the wake of a joint strike by the United States and Israel, Tehran almost completely severed the country’s connection to the global internet — likely leaving only users on a government whitelist with access to the outside world.

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Why a 2017 Linux bug is now a major concern for the crypto industry

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The “Copy Fail” Linux bug could impact crypto infrastructure that relies on Linux servers, highlighting growing cybersecurity risks in the digital asset industry.
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TeraWulf doubles AI revenue but posts $427M quarterly loss as mining income declines

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TeraWulf’s HPC lease revenue jumped 117% quarter-on-quarter to $21 million, but a $427 million net loss highlights the costs of transitioning from Bitcoin mining to AI infrastructure.

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