Goliath Ventures CEO pleads guilty for role in $400M crypto Ponzi
A Florida man has pleaded guilty in a crypto-linked fraud case in which prosecutors said investors sent at least $400 million to Goliath Ventures before millions were spent on luxury homes, cars, watches, and jewelry.
- Christopher Alexander Delgado pleaded guilty to fraud and money laundering charges tied to Goliath Ventures.
- Prosecutors said investors paid at least $400 million into the firm through promised crypto liquidity pool returns.
- Delgado admitted causing at least $250 million in investor losses and agreed to forfeit luxury homes, cars, watches, bags and jewelry.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida said Tuesday that Christopher Alexander Delgado, 34, pleaded guilty to wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering. The fraud counts each carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, while the money laundering count carries up to 10 years.
Delgado, who ran Goliath Ventures after the firm previously operated as Gen-Z Venture Firm, admitted that his conduct caused at least $250 million in losses to investors, according to prosecutors.
The guilty plea comes months after federal authorities arrested him in February over an alleged crypto Ponzi scheme tied to purported liquidity pool investments.
Prosecutors detail luxury spending from investor funds
According to prosecutors, Delgado and others solicited investors by claiming their money would be placed into crypto liquidity pools that could generate returns. Earlier court filings said the scheme ran from January 2023 through January 2026 and that investors were drawn in through personal referrals, marketing material and high-end networking events that presented the business as legitimate.
Federal officials alleged in February that more than $300 million had been collected from victims, with only about $1 million placed into legitimate crypto assets. In the latest statement, prosecutors said at least $400 million was paid by investors to Goliath.
The funds were used for business gatherings, holiday parties, luxury travel, and the personal lifestyles of Delgado and other Goliath employees, prosecutors said. With investor money, Delgado bought at least six residential properties valued between $1.15 million and $8.5 million each, along with high-end vehicles, watches, jewelry, and luxury goods.
Prosecutors said the purchases included Lamborghinis, Rolls-Royces, Rolex watches, several dozen Louis Vuitton bags, wallets and luggage, as well as custom Tiffany jewelry.
As part of the plea agreement, Delgado agreed to forfeit eight properties, 11 cars, 30 watches, more than 50 luxury bags and wallets, and 29 pieces of expensive jewelry.
Earlier filings said investors began facing delayed withdrawals, inconsistent explanations, and limited access to account information as the scheme unraveled. IRS Criminal Investigation and Homeland Security Investigations led the federal probe, and authorities had previously asked any unidentified victims to come forward under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act.