Operation Token Mirrors is back in the crypto spotlight after viral posts revived the FBI’s unusual decision to create its own Ethereum token, NexFundAI, to catch alleged wash-trading firms.
The original case is not new. U.S. prosecutors first unsealed the NexFundAI-linked action in October 2024, charging 18 individuals and entities tied to alleged fraud and market manipulation. The case targeted token issuers and crypto market makers that allegedly used wash trades to create fake trading activity before selling into retail demand.
The FBI-created token sat at the center of the evidence. ZM Quant, CLS Global and MyTrade were accused of wash trading or conspiring to wash trade NexFundAI, while Gotbit and its executives faced separate allegations tied to wider manipulation services. More than $25 million in cryptocurrency was seized, and trading bots tied to wash trades across roughly 60 tokens were deactivated.
The case also exposed how retail-facing charts can be manufactured. Saitama, which once claimed a multi-billion-dollar market value, was accused of using coordinated buys, market makers and Telegram activity to create the appearance of demand. That same market-making scrutiny now sits beside other high-profile crypto trading disputes, including the Jane Street and Terraform Labs lawsuit over UST liquidity and information flow.
2026 Charges Keep The Operation Alive
The enforcement push did not end with NexFundAI. In March 2026, federal prosecutors in California charged 10 foreign nationals across Gotbit, Vortex, Antier and Contrarian, alleging that they inflated token volume and prices before selling into unsuspecting investors.
The later indictments involved several FBI-created tokens and more than $1 million in seized cryptocurrency. A separate enforcement breakdown tied an undercover token called Lexobit to the Gotbit side of the operation, while the DOJ case said some defendants were arrested in Singapore and extradited to the United States.
Gotbit founder Aleksei Andriunin pleaded guilty in 2025 and was later sentenced to eight months, with Gotbit ordered to forfeit $23 million and shut down operations. The wider case shows how prosecutors are treating fake volume as a criminal market-structure problem, not just a noisy feature of low-liquidity crypto trading.
That makes the viral posts useful only as renewed attention, not as a fresh breaking claim. The enforcement record already shows the core issue: wash trading can make a dead market look liquid, a weak token look active and a pump-and-dump look like organic demand. For traders, any small-cap chart built on sudden volume, coordinated social hype and thin liquidity deserves more skepticism than a green candle can provide.




Be the first to comment