Wednesday, January 24, 2024 – A Colorado-based online pastor is facing fraud charges after allegedly pocketing $1.3 million from a cryptocurrency scheme he sold to his followers that raised nearly $3.2 million.
Eligio "Eli" Regalado and his wife, Kaitlyn
Regalado, were named on a legal complaint filed to Colorado’s securities
commissioner last week, accusing the couple of violating the anti-fraud,
licensing and registration provisions of the Colorado Securities Act.
The complaint alleges, among other grievances, that the
Regalados targeted a devout Christian community and sold an "unsafe"
and "unsecure" product using Eli's religious position to do so.
Investors, who were told God had a direct hand in the
crypto, have since lost millions, according to the securities commissioner.
The Regalados first began selling their cryptocurrency,
called INDXcoin, to the Denver Christian community in June 2022, raising
nearly $3.2 million from more than 300 individuals by April
2023, according to a statement released by the Colorado Division of
Securities Thursday.
The couple not only marketed the currency, which was called
"illiquid" and "practically worthless" in the legal
complaint, to their parishioners but also sold it only through Kingdom Wealth
Exchange (KWE), an online cryptocurrency platform that they "created,
controlled and operated."
Part of this marketing was telling followers and potential
investors that God had spoken directly to Eli and told him to create the crypto
and that investors would become wealthy, a claim Regalado doubled down
on in a recent video addressing his followers.
"The Lord said: I want you to build this,” he said in
the message. “We took God at his word and sold a cryptocurrency with no clear
exit.”
He also went on to assure followers his trust in God had not
faltered and he believes divine intervention is still to come, saying: “Either
I misheard God, and every one of you who prayed and came in — you as well. Or
two, God is still not done with this project."
In the video, Eli also confirmed that $1.3 million of the
money went into his own pockets, some of which he and his wife used for a home
remodel.
“Out of the $1.3 [million], half a million dollars went to
the IRS, and a few hundred thousand dollars went to a home remodel the Lord
told us to do," he said.
The legal complaint alleges that the Regalados spent the
money on more than just God's word, accusing the couple of maintaining a
“lavish lifestyle," which included the purchase of a Range Rover, luxury
handbags, jewelry, an au pair, boat rentals and snowmobile rides, while
investors lost large sums in what they were told was a "low risk,
high-profit investment” ordained by God.
“We allege that Mr. Regalado took advantage of the trust and
faith of his own Christian community and that he peddled outlandish promises of
wealth to them when he sold them essentially worthless cryptocurrencies,”
Colorado Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said in a statement.“New coins and
new exchanges are easy to create with open-source code. We want to remind
consumers to be very skeptical.”
Regalado, who has no prior experience in the financial or
crypto sectors, said in the video that their planned exchange technology failed
due to technical issues, making it impossible for investors to cash out. He
likewise admitted that he had doubts about starting INDXcoin in the first
place.
“I said: Lord, I don’t want to do this. I don’t know how to
do this. I don’t have any experience in this industry," said Eli. "I
don’t know what I’m doing. I don’t want to be caught up in something.”
Still, dozens of followers commented beneath the clip,
reassuring the pastor that they believed God would find a solution for him yet.
"What we're believing for still is that God is going to
do a miracle," Regalado's video said. "God is going to work a miracle
in the financial sector."
In the meantime, the Colorado Division of Securities is
asking anyone who has invested in INDXcoin or any other of Regalado's other
businesses to contact them.
Eli and Kaitlyn Regalado and three companies under Eli's
name are charged with securities fraud, unlicensed broker-dealer activity,
selling unregistered securities and imposition of constructive trust. They are
scheduled to appear in Denver District Court next week.
Watch Eli speak in the video below.
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