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You know, I recently came across the story of one of the most high-profile cryptocurrency scandals, and it still gives me chills. Ruja Ignatova — a Bulgarian-German scammer who created OneCoin, and it was just a manic project.
It all started quite ambitiously. In 2014, she launched OneCoin, positioning it as a serious competitor to Bitcoin. On paper, everything looked convincing: supposedly blockchain technology, promises of astronomical profits, and people from over 100 countries began investing money. Ignatova even made bold statements — I remember in 2016 she said that in two years, no one would be talking about Bitcoin.
Ruja Ignatova herself looked like the perfect leader for such a project. Born in Ruse, Bulgaria, in 1980, she moved to Germany at age ten, earned a PhD in international law, and even claimed she worked at McKinsey. At first glance — a quite legitimate figure. But that was just a facade.
The reality turned out to be much darker. OneCoin raised about $4 billion, although some sources talk about losses of up to £12.9 billion. There was no real blockchain — just a classic Ponzi scheme. And when everything started to fall apart, Ruja Ignatova simply disappeared. In October 2017, she flew from Sofia to Athens, and no one has seen her since.
Since then, the story has become a detective mystery. The FBI added her to the list of the 10 most wanted in 2022, with a reward of $5 million. Europol is also searching for her, although their reward of £4,100 seems frankly laughable compared to the scale of the crime. It’s believed she used fake passports, may have undergone plastic surgery, or could have been killed by the Bulgarian mafia.
The most interesting part is the network that protected her. There are suspicions that influential people in Bulgaria helped her evade investigation. Her last confirmed appearance was at Athens Airport, and since then, only speculations. Maybe in Russia, maybe in Greece, most likely under armed guard.
And what really pisses me off — OneCoin is still operating! Despite the exposure, the scheme is still being promoted in some African and Latin American countries, creating new victims. Ignatova’s story even inspired the BBC podcast "The Missing Crypto Queen" and other media investigations.
All this is a harsh lesson about why you need to be cautious with unregistered projects. Ruja Ignatova showed that academic intelligence combined with criminal audacity can deceive millions. Her case is not just a crypto scandal; it’s a reminder of the real risks that exist in this space.