Bitcointopia Founder Admits Selling Government-Owned Land to Bitcoiners

The founder of a scheme called Bitcointopia to sell land in the U.S. state of Nevada to bitcoiners has admitted in a federal court that some land was not his to sell. Previously arrested for selling BTC to an undercover agent through Localbitcoins, he also pleaded guilty to running an unlicensed money transmitting business.

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Bitcointopia Founder Admits Fraud

Morgan Rockcoons, a former Localbitcoins trader who was previously arrested for selling BTC to a U.S. federal agent, has reportedly pleaded guilty to perpetrating a scam selling land that he does not own.

The scheme, known as Bitcointopia, involved the sale of plots of land in the Nevada desert where Rockcoons advertised a vision of libertarians living together using only cryptocurrencies and observing as few laws as possible. The Los Angeles Times reported that Rockcoons pleaded guilty to several charges on Thursday in San Diego federal court, elaborating:

He sold land he never owned to investors.

Elko, Nevada

Unlicensed Money Transmitter

Rockcoons, aka Morgan Rockwell and Metaballo, also pleaded guilty Thursday to operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, the Los Angeles Times also reported. On Feb. 9 last year, he was arrested for selling over $10,000 worth of BTC to an undercover U.S. Homeland Security Investigations agent.

Under federal law, bitcoin exchanges must be registered as money transmitting businesses with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. They must conduct KYC and “report any transactions over $10,000 to the government,” the news outlet emphasized, adding that Rockcoons faces up to 20 years in prison on the wire fraud charge and up to five years on the money transmitting charge.

The Bitcointopia Scheme

While out on bail from his arrest for selling BTC to a federal agent, Rockcoons launched a real estate venture known as Bitcointopia. He advertised parcels of land in Nevada’s Elko County, selling 500- to 1,000-acre plots of undeveloped land for 0.5 BTC per acre. He promised to “build a city of the future around cryptocurrency, automation and technology. He was inspired by Walt Disney’s Tomorrowland,” the Los Angeles Times described.

In a blog post he made last May to promote the scheme, Rockcoons declared that “The long term goal is to establish an organization and government that can reach out from this land all the way to the Kuiper belt & eventually the Oort Cloud.”

On Nov. 13 last year, he tweeted that he had been arrested again and asked bitcoiners to support him by showing up to his January court hearing.

His Thursday’s plea agreement, which came about a month before his trial was to start, reveals that at least 10 investors bought land from him, incurring a loss of at least $45,600, the news outlet noted, adding:

Rockcoons owned less than 5 acres on two noncontiguous plots, prosecutors said. Much of the land in the area is actually owned by the federal government.

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Images courtesy of Shutterstock and Elko Convention and Visitors Authority.

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