Crypto investors in South Korea sue Terraform founders
By Kim Han-joo
SEOUL, May 19 (Yonhap) -- A group of South Koreans who invested in two main tokens of Terraform Labs have sued Do Kwon, the embattled cryptocurrency firm's co-founder and CEO, and co-founder Daniel Shin, a law firm representing the investors said Thursday.
LKB & Partners said the complaints have been filed with the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors Office against the two entrepreneurs for alleged fraud and violation of the law regulating fund-raising.
A total of five investors have participated in the suit, with their damages amounting to 1.4 billion won (US$1.1 million), they said. More investors from both South Korea and abroad, including the United State and Italy, have made inquiries about the suit.
TerraUST, a so-called stablecoin that is meant to maintain a US$1 peg, and its digital coin counterpart, Luna, had been trading in the 10 cent-range and at nearly zero, respectively, registering more than 99.99-percent falls from their highs and wiping out nearly US$38 billion of investors' money in a week, according to data by CoinMarketCap.
The sudden meltdown dealt a crushing blow to many tech-savvy young investors who betted big on the algorithmic cryptocurrencies, seen largely as experimental, amid the recent boom in cryptocurrency assets.
"CEO Kwon and others did not properly notify (investors) of an error in algorithm while attracting investors through planning and issuing Luna and UST ... the act itself is fraud," the law firm said in a press release.
Do founded Terraform Labs with Shin -- founder of TMON Inc., one of South Korea's major e-commerce operators -- in 2018.
South Korea's financial authorities said about 280,000 local investors were believed to be holding about 70 billion Luna coins.
"(Terraform Labs) engaged in fraudulent activity by promising an annual rate of return of 19.4 percent," the law firm said.
CEO Do earlier said in a blog post that his firm is working on ways to keep its Terra blockchain and ecosystem going despite the collapse of its cryptocurrencies.
The disgraced entrepreneur also floated the idea of creating new coins. If the proposal is approved, it would leave behind UST and Luna – they would be renamed Terra Classic and Luna Classic, respectively.
khj@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
(Yonhap Interview) Fintech startup AIM aims to bring professional wealth services to ordinary investors
-
N.K. leader declares victory in fight against COVID-19: state media
-
7 dead, 6 missing in heaviest rainfall in 80 years
-
(2nd LD) 7 dead, 6 missing in heaviest rainfall in 80 years
-
(LEAD) PPP approves leadership shift, names interim leader
-
(Yonhap Interview) Fintech startup AIM aims to bring professional wealth services to ordinary investors
-
7 dead, 6 missing in heaviest rainfall in 80 years
-
(5th LD) 8 dead, 7 missing in record rainfall in Seoul, surrounding areas
-
(LEAD) 7 dead, 6 missing in heaviest rainfall in 80 years
-
(2nd LD) Samsung heir Lee granted special presidential pardon
-
Bank's refusal to open account for foreigner with long name 'discriminatory': rights watchdog
-
(LEAD) Yoon pledges to improve ties with Japan, offers economic aid in exchange for N.K. denuclearization
-
Yoon pledges to improve ties with Japan, offers economic aid in exchange for N.K. denuclearization
-
S. Korea expresses deep regret over Japanese PM's offering to war shrine
-
(LEAD) S. Korea's new COVID-19 cases below 100,000 for 1st time in 7 days