DeMarr Complaint
DeMarr Complaint
DeMarr Complaint
AES/DCP:KTF/HM
F. #2019R0810
JAMES KIM, being duly sworn, deposes and states that he is a Special Agent
with the Internal Revenue Service, duly appointed according to law and acting as such.
Upon information and belief, from in or about and between November 2017
and May 2018, both dates being approximate and inclusive, within the Eastern District of
New York and elsewhere, the defendant JOHN DEMARR, together with others, did
knowingly and willfully conspire to use and employ manipulative and deceptive devices and
contrivances, contrary to Rule 10b-5 of the Rules and Regulations of the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission, Title 17, Code of Federal Regulations, Section
240.10b-5, by: (i) employing devices, schemes and artifices to defraud; (ii) making one or
more untrue statements of material fact and omitting to state one or more material facts
necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which
they were made, not misleading; and (iii) engaging in acts, practices and courses of business
which would and did operate as a fraud and deceit upon one or more investors and potential
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investors in Start Options and B2G, in connection with the purchase and sale of investments
in Start Options and B2G, directly and indirectly, by use of means and instrumentalities of
interstate commerce and the mails, contrary to Title 15, United States Code, Sections 78j(b)
and 78ff. In furtherance of the conspiracy and to effect its objects, within the Eastern
District of New York and elsewhere, the defendant JOHN DEMARR, together with others,
(Title 18, United States Code, Sections 371 and 3551 et seq.)
INTRODUCTION
The source of your deponent’s information and the grounds for his belief are
as follows:
Criminal Investigation (“IRS-CI”) in the Los Angeles Field Office, and have served in this
capacity for approximately twelve years. As part of my training as an SA, I attended the
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Georgia, where I received training in
criminal and financial investigative techniques with an emphasis in accounting and criminal
tax law. My training included courses in law enforcement techniques, federal criminal
techniques, and legal principles and statutes related to criminal violations of Titles 18, 26,
the Internal Revenue Code, the Bank Secrecy Act and the Money Laundering Control Act, as
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well as other financial crimes such as wire fraud. These investigations have involved the
undercover operations; and the preparation and execution of search and arrest warrants. I
have consulted with other experienced senior investigators concerning the methods and
practices of individuals engaged in crimes such as the preparation of false income tax
returns, income tax evasion, wire fraud and money laundering. Prior to my current position,
I was a Revenue Agent with the Internal Revenue Service Small Business and Self-
2. I am familiar with the facts and circumstances set forth below from,
among other things: (a) my personal participation in this investigation, (b) discussions with
other law enforcement agents involved in this investigation, and (c) my review of marketing
affidavit between facts of which I have personal knowledge and facts I learned from other
law enforcement agents. Because this affidavit is being submitted for the limited purpose of
establishing probable cause to arrest the defendant, I have not set forth each and every fact
learned during the course of the investigation described below. Instead, I have set forth only
those facts that I believe are necessary to establish probable cause for the arrest warrant
sought herein. In addition, where the contents of documents or the actions, statements and
conversations of others are reported herein, they are reported in sum and substance and in
part.
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PROBABLE CAUSE
circulated over the Internet as a form of value. Virtual currencies were not issued by any
government, bank, or company, but were controlled through computer software operating via
maintained ledgers, which tracked the amount of each cryptocurrency held by any given user.
Within that network, users could conduct cryptocurrency transactions amongst themselves in a
exchange,” was a business that functioned to allow customers to purchase, sell or trade
virtual currencies, including for other forms of value, such as conventional fiat money (e.g.,
application that allowed cryptocurrency users to store and retrieve their digital assets.
Digital wallets could hold multiple cryptocurrencies. Each digital wallet had a unique
cryptocurrency, did not have its own network, but could be used on other cryptocurrency
networks for virtual goods or services. Cryptocurrency tokens were usually created,
distributed, sold, and circulated through the initial coin offering process.
company would sell interested investors a new cryptocurrency token in exchange for funds to
grow the company. ICOs were usually marketed to investors using a “technical
cryptocurrency product, the product’s technical solution, how the product would be
10. Bitcoin was one form of cryptocurrency, which was created in 2009 and
Individual-1 that purported to offer cryptocurrency and related investments through its
website and social media. Bitcoiin used a name similar to the cryptocurrency Bitcoin and
made false claims about its product to induce investments. On its now-defunct website,
“B2G.” Bitcoiin claimed that B2G was part of a virtual currency “ecosystem” which
included a “mining ecosystem (Dragon Mining Tech), and a crypto-wallet (B2G wallet).”
12. Bitcoiin had previously done business under different corporate names,
including the name “Start Options” in or about the fall of 2017. Start Options and the
13. The defendant JOHN DEMARR was an American citizen who was a
resident of California. DEMARR worked as a private detective since 1988, and ran his own
DEMARR was a promoter of several digital asset-related companies, including Start Options
and B2G. DEMARR was identified to investors of Start Options and B2G as the “Director
the affiant, was an American citizen who was a resident of Nevada. CC-1 previously
worked as an attorney in California, but resigned CC-1’s license to practice while facing
disciplinary charges in 2011. CC-1, acting primarily at the direction of the defendant JOHN
DEMARR, also served as a ghostwriter of press releases, technical whitepapers and website
the affiant, was an American citizen who was a resident of California. CC-2 worked as a
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private investigator and for a property management company based in the Midwest, and
previously served as a police officer. CC-2 worked with the defendant JOHN DEMARR in
connection with Start Options and B2G, and primarily assisted DEMARR with the collection
and distribution of funds and signing up investors. CC-2 held him/herself out to investors
and prospective investors as the Chief Compliance Officer of B2G, although CC-2 had no
Philippines. In connection with the schemes described below, Individual-1 used the alias
“Felix Logan,” and “Felix Logan” purported to be the Chief Financial Officer of Start
Options.
17. “Sasha Bjelov” was a pseudonym for a foreign individual who assisted
Individual-1 with the schemes described below. “Sasha Bjelov” purported to act as the
with Individual-1, who was using the name “Felix Logan,” to promote and market Start
Options in the United States in exchange for commissions based on the value of investments
made by those investors whom DEMARR recruited. DEMARR worked at the direction of
Individual-1 to attract U.S. investors in Start Options, including investors in the Eastern
together with others, began offering securities in the form of investment contracts through
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the Start Options Website. Start Options was marketed in the United States and worldwide
by promoters using the Start Options Website, letters, e-mails and social media (the “Start
Options Marketing Materials”). The Start Options investment contracts were available for
purchase by individuals in the United States and worldwide through the Start Options
Website, and investments were accepted either in Bitcoin, or in U.S. dollars or Euros payable
through credit card or bank wires. To participate, investors had to deposit their funds for a
specified contract period—60 or 90 days—after which they could purportedly withdraw their
20. The Start Options Marketing Materials falsely claimed that investor
funds would be invested in digital asset mining and digital asset trading platforms that would
earn them a guaranteed profit after a certain number of days. In reality, Start Options
investors’ money was never invested in any vehicles, and, in any event, Start Options could
Materials.
2017 that Start Options was not a legitimate business. On or about December 18, 2017, a
Start Options promoter sent DEMARR an email that copied portions of a blog post written
The blog post described, in sum and substance, how Start Options was not operating out of
its purported address in the Philippines and was “not a real business.” Later that day,
DEMARR forwarded the email to Individual-1 and wrote, “See below- we need to fix this or
22. One way that investors in the United States would invest in Start
Options was by emailing the defendant JOHN DEMARR their names, addresses and credit
card information, after which DEMARR and CC-2 would process the investors’ credit cards,
and the money would go to a bank account controlled by DEMARR. For example, on or
about February 8, 2018, a U.S. investor who resided in the Eastern District of New York
(“Investor 1,” an individual whose identity is known to the affiant) emailed DEMARR his or
her American Express card information and a copy of his or her driver’s license. DEMARR
forwarded that email to CC-2 and stated, “$1000.00 for Start Options.”
Individual-1. In or about and between December 1, 2017 and January 26, 2018, investors
sent approximately $2.9 million worth of Bitcoin and another cryptocurrency to that digital
the majority of whom were based in the United States (including ones located in the Eastern
District of New York), also sent approximately $1.3 million in U.S. dollars to a bank account
controlled by the defendant JOHN DEMARR in the United States during the same period.
24. Beginning in or about late 2017 through early 2018, investors could
track their Start Options investments through a personal account page on the Start Options
Website. Beginning in or about January 2018, investors in Start Options had difficulty
accessing the personal account page as well as redeeming their Start Options investments.
When there were issues with investors’ accounts, the defendant JOHN DEMARR would
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25. In or about late January 2018, as Start Options investors tried to redeem
their investments following the requisite 60- or 90-day time period, Start Options investors
were not permitted to withdraw money and were instead forced to roll over their accounts
which was described to investors as the “next generation of Bitcoin” (the “B2G Offering”).
website and emailed investors about an “opportunity” to take place in a “Special Buy-Out
Offer” that would only be available for a limited time. Start Options offered to “buy out
your unpaid account, for its full value in USD” if the investor deposited one-third of their
remaining value in “Start Options.com’s new Bitcoiin (B2G) fund. Or, in the alternative,
deposit one-third . . . of whatever balance you want to move across to B2G. This deposit
will earn profits, and can be withdrawn 90 days after deposit.” Start Options promised to
match the amount deposited and set it aside in a separate mining account for 90 days, after
which it could be “withdrawn freely.” All of the funds – both deposited and matching –
would purportedly be converted to B2G at the time of deposit, and “[o]nce matured at plus-
27. Although this buy-out offer was pitched as optional, all of the Start
Options investors were required to take part in this “opportunity.” All Start Options investors’
accounts were rolled into new B2G accounts. Even those Start Options investors who tried
to decline the “opportunity” were unable to cash in their shares, which were rolled into B2G
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accounts. These new B2G accounts listed the purported value of Start Options’ investors’
accounts in B2G tokens, rather than the other tokens that Start Options was purportedly
mining.
was open to the general public and allowed investors to purchase B2G tokens. Investors
were told that they could purchase B2G tokens using U.S. dollars, Euros, Bitcoins or other
cryptocurrencies, and that they could earn commissions by recruiting others to purchase B2G
tokens.
29. The defendant JOHN DEMARR, together with CC-1 and others,
drafted portions of the marketing materials for B2G that were circulated to potential
investors (the “B2G Marketing Materials”). Many statements contained within the B2G
(a) DEMARR and his co-conspirators told investors that the ICO
would raise capital for B2G to build an “ecosystem” that would allow users to trade B2G
tokens, digital currencies and fiat currencies, all “on a secure, comprehensive platform.”
The B2G technical whitepapers (the “Whitepapers”) that Bitcoiin distributed to potential
investors, posted on Bitcoiin’s website and linked to from its social media accounts, detailed
many of the allegedly key features of the B2G ecosystem. In reality, CC-1, at DEMARR’s
direction, had fabricated most of the detailed information about Bitcoiin in the Whitepapers
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successful ICO in 2013. CC-1 also falsely attributed the authorship of the Whitepapers to a
fake individual named “John Sebastian Williams,” who was purportedly a Bitcoiin
employee.
and attributed them to the same fake Bitcoiin employee, “John Williams,” who allegedly
authored the Whitepapers. These press releases and other marketing materials included
fraudulent misrepresentations about the success of the B2G offering, the project investors,
related technology platforms, the nature of the investment and the project principals.
(c) The B2G Marketing Materials falsely told investors that two
entities, “Dragon Mining” and “Thorex,” would contribute to B2G’s success. The B2G
Marketing Materials stated that Dragon Mining was supplying 10,000 mining machines to
support B2G and develop mining pools 1, and claimed that Thorex would serve as an “in
house crypto-exchange” that would permit investors to liquidate and trade B2G tokens
following the ICO. However, Dragon Mining and Thorex were entirely fictitious entities
created by Individual-1 with the assistance of DEMARR and CC-1. CC-1 drafted false
press releases for Dragon Mining that were posted on Dragon Mining’s website and
contained fabricated content that CC-1 plagiarized from other mining hardware websites.
using content CC-1 plagiarized from websites for other digital asset programs.
1
In a “mining pool,” cryptocurrency miners share their processing power over a network and
split their mining rewards pro rata based on the amount of work they contributed.
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B2G ICO based on false information. For example, a famous actor served as a promoter
and celebrity spokesperson for the B2G ICO (the “Celebrity Spokesperson,” an individual
whose identity is known to the affiant). In connection with the ICO, the Celebrity
Spokesperson falsely claimed on social media that B2G could generate an 8000% return for
investors within one year. The Celebrity Spokesperson also falsely claimed that B2G was a
“mineable coin.” In reality, B2G was not a mineable cryptocurrency. The Celebrity
webinars to induce them to invest in the B2G ICO. In fact, the Celebrity Spokesperson
never invested in the B2G ICO and only served as a paid promoter.
30. As with Start Options, investors sent money to the defendant JOHN
DEMARR to purchase B2G tokens. For example, on or about March 12, 2018, Investor 1
wired $15,000 from Jamaica, New York, which is located in the Eastern District of New
York, to a bank account controlled by DEMARR, with the memo line “TO JOHN DE
MARR FOR BIG [sic] COINS.” As another example, on or about March 29, 2018, a
different U.S. investor residing in the Eastern District of New York (“Investor 2,” an
individual whose identity is known to the affiant), emailed DEMARR with the subject line
“New Deposits for B2G.” This email contained information about investments of two other
individuals that were being routed through Investor 2. The email stated in part, “Hi John,
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here are 2 deposits one of 10k for new acct. and 500.00 for additional deposit for current
31. Investors in the B2G ICO never actually received any digital tokens
and funds from the offering were not used to develop the B2G platform. Instead, investors
received fabricated account statements that falsely represented that their money had been
invested in B2G tokens and that their investments were earning enormous returns. In
reality, virtually all of the proceeds of the B2G ICO were used to make payments to the
32. In or about late March 2018, Bitcoiin announced that it was becoming
“truly open source” and would become a “genuinely anonymous cryptocurrency with no
individual or individuals having control over the entity.” As a result, the company
announced that the founders, including Individual-1, and the Celebrity Spokesperson were
investments from B2G, but they were either discouraged or prevented from doing so by the
DEMARR and others sent investors e-mails with purported reasons to delay the withdrawals,
such as technical difficulties with the websites. Investors who persisted in seeking to
withdraw funds were either told that their requests were denied, or never received their
funds. Similarly, investors who tried to recover their promised commissions from B2G
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about and between March 2018 and April 2018, DEMARR sent emails to “Sasha Bjelov”
and others that described complaints from investors who were unable to withdraw funds
from B2G.
approximately $7 million in investor funds from the sale of B2G and Start Options that
Individual-1 had received through the defendant JOHN DEMARR. At that time, Individual-
claimed that the company had been sold to Russian venture capitalists. Despite the fact that
DEMARR knew that Individual-1 had left with investor funds and that Bitcoiin was
collapsing, DEMARR never informed investors of this information and instead falsely
insisted to investors that B2G tokens would soon be listed on major digital asset platforms.
35. In or about May 2018, the defendant JOHN DEMARR began collecting
B2G tokens from disgruntled investors to allegedly conduct a “bulk sale,” which DEMARR
claimed was a way to get money back from the B2G principals, including Individual-1,
within several days. Investors began transferring B2G tokens they thought they owned to
DEMARR, with the expectation that DEMARR would return their original investment funds
shortly. When the investors never received their funds, the investors began to demand
payment from DEMARR, who told the investors that the “bulk sale” of B2G tokens could
36. In or about late May 2018, the defendant JOHN DEMARR told some
B2G investors that DEMARR was flying to Hong Kong to conduct the “bulk sale.” Instead,
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37. Rather than face the disgruntled B2G investors, the defendant JOHN
DEMARR staged his own disappearance and communicated the fake disappearance to
B2G’s investors, including investors located in the Eastern District of New York, through
CC-1 and others. DEMARR instructed CC-1 to release statements asserting that DEMARR
had been assaulted and went missing in Montenegro, and telling B2G investors to stop
attempting to contact DEMARR or his family regarding their inability to have their
investment in B2G returned. CC-2 also released statements about DEMARR’s alleged
disappearance. On or about May 25, 2018, CC-2 e-mailed certain B2G investors claiming
that DEMARR had landed in Montenegro with purportedly $25 million worth of B2G tokens
in a private account, but had been attacked in Montenegro and the tokens had been stolen out
of the account. After CC-2 released these statements, DEMARR ceased contact with
investors.
38. Since his alleged disappearance, the defendant JOHN DEMARR has
resided, at least in part, in California. DEMARR used investor funds from Start Options and
B2G to purchase, among other things, jewelry and luxury vehicles such as a Porsche, and to
39. B2G investors were ultimately told by CC-1 and CC-2 that the account
with the B2G tokens had been zeroed out and that the funds had been lost. To date, known
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40. In furtherance of the conspiracy and to effect its objects, within the
Eastern District of New York and elsewhere, the defendant JOHN DEMARR, together with
others, did commit and cause the commission of, among others, the following:
OVERT ACTS
Start Options promoter that copied portions of a blog post describing how Start Options was
a “scam,” DEMARR forwarded the email to Individual-1 and wrote, “See below- we need to
drafted one or more false press releases for Dragon Mining that were posted on Dragon
Mining’s website, which contained fabricated content that CC-1 plagiarized from other
whitepapers for other cryptocurrency companies. CC-1 also attributed the authorship of the
Whitepapers to a fake individual named “John Sebastian Williams,” who was purportedly a
Bitcoiin employee.
Eastern District of New York, emailed DEMARR his or her American Express card
information and a copy of his or her driver’s license. DEMARR forwarded that email to
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wire $15,000 from Jamaica, New York to a bank account controlled by DEMARR. The
wire transfer contained the memo line “TO JOHN DE MARR FOR BIG [sic] COINS.”
York—asserting that DEMARR had been assaulted and went missing in Montenegro, and
DEMARR be dealt with according to law. Because public filing of this document could
result in a risk of flight by the defendant JOHN DEMARR, as well as jeopardize the
government’s ongoing investigation, your deponent respectfully requests that this complaint,
as well as the arrest warrant issued in connection with this complaint, be filed under seal.
JAMES KIM
Special Agent, Internal Revenue Service
____________________________________________
_____________________
THE HONORABLE CHERYL L. POLLAK
CHIEF UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK