Written by Ezra Reguerrastaff writerReviewed by Yohan Yunstaff writer
Written by Ezra Reguerrastaff writer
Reviewed by Yohan Yunstaff writer
Former Goliath Ventures CEO pleads guilty in $400M crypto Ponzi case
Latest NewsPublishedJul 1, 2026
Former Goliath Ventures CEO Christopher Delgado pleaded guilty to fraud and money laundering and agreed to forfeit properties, vehicles, luxury goods and crypto wallets.

Former Goliath Ventures CEO Christopher Alexander Delgado pleaded guilty to his role in a crypto investment scheme that prosecutors stated raised at least $400 million from investors.
On Tuesday, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) stated Goliath promised investors monthly returns generated through digital asset liquidity pools between January 2023 and January 2026.
Prosecutors stated the funds were instead used to pay earlier investors, process withdrawals, fund luxury spending and finance business events.
Delgado pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, as well as wire fraud and money laundering. Under the plea agreement, he admitted the scheme caused at least $250 million in investor losses and agreed to forfeit an extensive portfolio of luxury assets purchased with investor funds.
as reported by the DOJ, Delgado agreed to surrender eight properties, 11 vehicles, 30 watches, over 50 luxury bags and wallets, at least 29 pieces of jewelry and bank accounts and crypto wallets. He faces up to 20 years in prison for each fraud count and up to 10 years for money laundering.
Delgado’s sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 8.

Excerpt of the plea agreement. Source: DOJ
Guilty plea follows Delgado’s public apology
The plea follows Delgado’s television appearance and public apology to investors. On May 12, Delgado appeared in an interview with Florida television station WFTV. At the time, he stated investors had placed their trust in him and that he had failed them, saying he had voluntarily returned to the US and was cooperating with authorities.
Delgado stated only about $160,000 remained in the company’s bank account at the time of his arrest and stated that other former colleagues were involved in the operation.
Related: Florida man pleads guilty for promoting $1.8B ‘HyperFund’ crypto fraud
The case also drew scrutiny of the financial institutions that processed Goliath funds. On March 12, investors filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase, alleging that the bank ignored suspicious transactions and allowed Goliath to collect investor funds through its accounts.
The lawsuit claimed that about $253 million passed through a JPMorgan account, including about $123 million later transferred to Goliath’s wallets at Coinbase. A separate federal complaint also identified flows through Bank of America and directly to Coinbase wallets.
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- Fraud
- Ponzi Scheme
- Law
- United States
- Department of Justice
- Regulation
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