Rodney Burton, a 56-year-old crypto promoter known online as “Bitcoin Rodney,” is facing substantially expanded federal charges for his alleged role promoting the $1.8 billion HyperFund cryptocurrency scheme, according to a superseding indictment announced Friday by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland.
The new indictment charges Burton with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, two counts of wire fraud, seven counts of money laundering, and one count of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. If convicted on all counts, Burton faces a maximum of 20 years in federal prison for the wire fraud conspiracy and each wire fraud count, plus 10 years for each money laundering count and five years for the unlicensed money transmission charge.
The charges represent a significant escalation from Burton’s original Jan. 2024 criminal complaint, which included only two counts related to unlicensed money transmission carrying a maximum of five years each. Burton was arrested at Miami International Airport in Jan. 2024, with a one-way ticket to the UAE, and has been detained since a federal judge denied his bail request, citing him as an “extreme flight risk.”
According to court documents, Burton and his co-conspirators operated HyperFund, also known as HyperVerse, which they presented as a legitimate cryptocurrency investment platform, from June 2020 through May 2024. The scheme allegedly promised investors daily returns of 0.5% to 1% until their initial investments doubled or tripled, claiming the returns would come from large-scale crypto mining operations.
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