SEE ALSO: The Best VPN Services For 2020 Photo credit: Jason Reed / Daily Dot The founder of the BitCoin exchange, Moolah, has resigned amidst claims that he stole up to $350,000 from investors using multiple identities and BitCoin exchanges. The identity of CEO Alex Green, AKA Ryan Kennedy, AKA Ryan Gentle came under question yesterday after it was revealed that the same Ryan Kennedy that raised 500 BitCoin (worth approximately A$226,108) for the Crypto.pm exchange without ever following through is allegedly the very same person that founded Moolah.ch, an almost identical exchange that also just closed, taking with it hundreds of thousands of dollars in investment funds. A Google document revealing Green's split identities was posted online yesterday by Jackson Palmer, the Australian founder of the satirical cryptocurrency, Dogecoin and Ben Doernberg, Former Dogecoin Foundation member after they became concerned that Green had defrauded his investors and customers. After posting a blog announcing Moolah's bankruptcy on Tuesday, Green backtracked, claiming it had found new venture capitalists to back the site. "As a result, we are halting proceedings for dissolution and winding down (a’la bankruptcy), and will be fighting Tooth and Nail to keep things going," Green wrote on the Moolah blog, though he did not go so far as to to name the VCs allegedly keeping the site afloat. Less than 24 hours later, Green had resigned, even though he claims his identity is "irrelevant".

A screen cap of Alex Green in his now infamous Liveleak video, alongside a screen shot taken from Ryan Kennedy's Facebook page. Same person? You decide.

"My identity becomes relevant if I break the law, which is something that neither myself nor my employees have done," he wrote on the Moolah blog. "To be as clear as I can, I could have been born as John Smith, and it wouldn’t matter. This is not to be taken as confirmation or admission of anything, that will follow at a later stage. In the eyes of the law, my name is Alex Green. "I have seen a number of reports by one Ben Doernberg demanding that investors call the police. For what exactly? What laws have been broken?" Well, according to the document - and The Bath Chronical - Green, AKA Ryan Kennedy was put on a "12-month conditional discharge and restraining order for harassment" in the UK. According to Doernberg - who resigned from the Dogecoin Foundation in April in response to Green's refusal to provide information about its business operations - Green also stole 750 Bitcoin investments in Moolah profit shares as well as taking pre-orders for ATMs that were never delivered. (Green cornered the market on DogeCoin earlier last year, setting up the Moolah exchange with the exact purpose of being the go-to place for users to trade it for other currencies). "He is also holding 500 Bitcoins in escrow for the developer of another coin called 'SysCoin'," Doernberg told PC Mag Australia, along with an unknown amount of the cryptocurrency in a separate Mintpal exchange which he has since shutdown. Doernberg estimates that there were at least 400 BitCoins in that account, maybe more. The document also contained a screenshot of Green's drivers license, which lists his name as Ryan Francis Gentle. He is thought to have founded six companies in 2013 alone, including Lemon.sx, Cirtus.pw, Nuplay.co, Flirble.me, Affinity.so, Escrow.pm and Nzbx.co. Palmer and Doernberg said they curated the document using information they received from "several" anonymous emails "from concerned parties" within the crypto-currency community. Photos of Green posted in the document compiled by Jackson and Doernberg also seem to match images featured on Ryan Kennedy's Facebook page whose hometown (California) and location (London) are the same as the ones Green claims to be from. His Likes also include cryptocurrencies such as Blockchain.

A screenshot of Ryan Kennedy's Facebook page.