The most important role of self-proclaimed industry organizations such as the Crypto Valley Association (CVA) is that of a watchdog over the industry and its members. The Swiss CVA, in particular, positioned itself as a leading crypto institution during the crypto hype of 2017/18. Consequently, CVA acquired quite a lot paying members during the hype one of them was BluVenture Group Ltd – a fraudulent binary option scheme, as we and several hundred victims, who lost their live savings know by now. By now we also know that CVA has been a vehicle that promoted ICOs, celebrated the great future of the blockchain industry and spoke a lot about self-regulation. As can be seen in the many Swiss-related ICO scams, the CVA has failed rather miserably as s watchdog and self-regulatory body. And above all CVA has to answer some questions in the Bluetrading scam.
The BluVenture Membership
Well, unfortunately, fraud happens. Also under the supervision of regulatory authorities such as SEC, FCA, FINMA or BaFin. In this respect, the fraud of BluVentures via the BlueTrading.com Scam could also be treated as a painful but unfortunately happening phenomenon. It’s hard if not impossible to avoid a well-planned online fraud which Bluetrading.com for sure was.
Hiding, Deleting, And Silencing
What must not and should not happen under any circumstances, however, is the lack of willingness to support the investigations in the very best interest of the victims and the industry. Unfortunately, this exactly is the CVA approach currently. The association acts quite similar to the Bluetrading.com Scammers. Messages from investors seeking help on the CVA site have been deleted and CVA representatives do not respond to requests:
- Feb 27, 2019, some victims posted messages on the CVA website. The message was deleted soon after but is still available in Google cache.
- Feb 27, 2019, a single mom who evidently lost her money in the
Bluetrading scam asked CVA for help.Message wasdeleted, error 404. - Feb 28, 2019, CVA was asked about information on its member
Bluetrading .Message wasdeleted, error 404. - March 2, 2019, another victim asked CVA for help. His message was deleted. Error 404.
- March 11, 2019, request for support of a
Bluetrading victim. Online at the time of publishing this article, not yet resolved.
With this 404-approach, CVA not only violates its own values, but loses all legitimacy as an industry organization. In the very best interest of the crypto industry and the many cheated investors, CVA should actively support the investigations. We would expect the very same active approach CVA showed in the crypto hype and the ICO era.
Source: CVA announcement dated Feb 28, 2019
As always, the CVA remains committed to its mission of fostering a healthy blockchain ecosystem and does not tolerate any inappropriate behavior within its membership, particularly when it goes against the values that members sign up to when becoming part of the Association.
The negligent or intentional CVA behavior in the Bluetrading fraud case continued even though CVA announced investigations into the Bluetrading.com scam. On February 28, 2019, an Ian Simpson from CVA announced such investigation into allegations against BluVenture, now a former CVA member. The CVA says that “various persons” have voiced concern about Blue Trading and that it is investigating the public allegations about the firm’s “inappropriate business conduct, based on the CVA’s General Code of Conduct.”
Questions To Answer
CVA has some important questions to answer to help fo fully uncover the scam and find the perpetrators. The answers needed from CVA:
- who has signed the membership agreement and thus the code of conduct (legal entity, directors, beneficial owners),
- contact details of the organisation and persons involved.
- payment details (wallets, transactions)
- have made the required KYC (Know-Your-Customer/Client) checks been made on BluVenture and
- what are the details of the KYC check?
These are all questions that have to be answered immediately in the very best interest of defrauded investors, the industry and ultimately also the CVA. As a self-appointed regulatory authority, CVA has to participate in the clarification. EFRI, representing by now several Blue Trading victims also already reached out to them: no answer up to yet.
Dear CVA people: it’s time to act now to legitimate your institution! Feel free to join the
We have been following up on to the news of Blue Trading allegedly being a fraudulent Mauritius based organisation since it was first brought to our attention a few weeks ago. We have blocked them from any existing or potential CVA membership and have taken appropriate measures to guide affected individuals to the correct authorities. Our newly elected Ethics Officer and his team are currently investigating the case and will provide, if applicable, any details to the appropriate authorities.
We are deeply disappointed with the actions of individual companies which undermine not only the brand of the CVA, but the adoption of blockchain and digital assets as a whole. Be assured that the matter has our full attention and are aiming to provide the assistance we can to ensure the matter is resolved.
Our actions behind the scene are not reflected at the moment on our web site because we are in progress of upgrading our technical capabilities and our online processes. This will ultimately allow us to react much faster to such situations. A regrettable down-side is that we will appear slow to react in the interim.
Best regards,
The Crypto Valley Association
Add the link of our initial announcement https://cryptovalley.swiss/cva-statement-on-blue-trading/
Guys, we are not your publishing resp. marketing company. Such a “nothing-is-said” statement is a shame for your association. If you want to publish it, publish it on your own website.