A federal judge in Maryland sentenced New York resident Noman Saleem on Tuesday to more than a year in prison for a $1.4 million crypto fraud scheme built around impersonated influencer accounts. U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow also imposed three years of supervised release.
Saleem pleaded guilty last September to wire fraud charges and admitted to creating fake Telegram handles designed to imitate popular crypto influencers, using the bogus identities to solicit funds from victims who believed they were interacting with trusted figures in the space.
The case fits a recurring pattern in retail-facing crypto fraud: the impersonation layer is cheap, the payout requires only a small pool of victims, and the social proof of a recognized handle does most of the work. Sentencing marks the conclusion of the criminal phase; civil recovery for victims, if any, is a separate track.
Frequently asked questions
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Who was sentenced in the $1.4M crypto fraud case?
Noman Saleem, a New York resident, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow on Tuesday to over a year in prison and three years of supervised release.
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What was the fraud scheme built around?
Saleem admitted to creating fake Telegram handles designed to impersonate popular crypto influencers, then using those bogus identities to solicit funds from victims.
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When did Saleem plead guilty?
Saleem pleaded guilty last September to wire fraud charges before being sentenced this week.
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How much money did the scheme move?
The scheme pulled in $1.4 million from victims, according to the case.
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Can victims recover their money after the sentencing?
Criminal sentencing closes the government's case against the defendant, but civil recovery for victims, if pursued, runs on a separate legal track.
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