International Fugitive, Disbarred Lawyer Charged in Cryptocurrency Scam

Randy Levine, a man of many aliases, had been on the lam for 15 years before getting caught in Austria.


The Southern District of New York has charged an international fugitive who had been on the run for 15 years, and his disbarred lawyer partner, with commodities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering offenses related to a fraudulent Bitcoin offering.

The charges were levied against Randy Levine and Philip Reichenthal. According to the charges in the complaint, Levine allegedly persuaded investors to send millions of dollars to Reichenthal, who was a Florida-licensed attorney at the time, to fund the purchase of Bitcoin, purportedly to sell in large quantities to buyers. 

Reichenthal, who had claimed to be acting as an escrow agent for the transactions, sent a significant portion of the money to Levine before any Bitcoin was provided to investors. However, according to the complaint, neither one ever provided any Bitcoin to investors nor refunded their money.   

“The money was funneled, as alleged, to overseas bank accounts controlled by Levine,” William Sweeney Jr., assistant director-in-charge of the FBI’s New York field office, said in a statement. “While the charges brought today against Levine and Reichenthal are fairly detailed and laden with allegations of complex criminal activity, the truth is much more simple: They were con artists who finally got caught in the act.”

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Levine, who also went under the aliases Viktor Lapin, Andre Santiago Santos Galindo, Alexander Martinez Lavrov, and Hristo Danielov Marinov, fled the US in 2005 after learning that he was under investigation for passport fraud.  

In 2018, Levine was arrested in Guatemala with a Russian passport posing as Viktor Lapin, and this past June he was arrested in Austria with a Bulgarian passport containing the alias Alexander Koslov. Extradition proceedings are pending. Reichenthal was arrested last week in Homestead, Florida.

The charges against the men involve two fraudulent schemes, the first of which occurred in June and July of 2018. Levine allegedly convinced the principal of a purported cryptocurrency escrow firm to wire Reichenthal more than $3 million from an over-the-counter cryptocurrency broker to purchase Bitcoin.

The charges allege Levine falsely told the individual that he would sell thousands of Bitcoin, but never intended to.

After receiving the $3 million, Reichenthal wired more than $2 million to bank accounts in Guatemala held in the name of one of Levine’s aliases. Levine allegedly then lied to the investor for days about why the deal had not worked out, the status of the purported Bitcoin, and the location of the invested money, which was never returned.

In the second scheme, which ran from approximately February to May 2019, Levine persuaded a Florida resident involved in brokering Bitcoin transactions to cause investors to send Reichenthal more than $2 million of their money to fund the purchase of Bitcoin. Like the first alleged scam, Levine said he would sell Bitcoin but had no intention of doing so.

After receiving the funds from the investors, Reichenthal sent more than $1.9 million to bank accounts in Mexico controlled by Levine, and that money was then wired to a bank account in Russia held in the name of one of Levine’s aliases. After the investor sought the return of the funds, Levine sent an electronic message threatening to drag the investor into Levine’s legal problems in Guatemala, and to falsely tell US authorities the investor was involved in money laundering.

Reichenthal used bank accounts held in the name of his law firm and an attorney trust account to receive the funds and then pass them to Levine, according to the complaint. Reichenthal voluntarily agreed to be disbarred by the state of Florida after a dozen attorney disciplinary charges were filed against him related to over $2 million in escrow funds that he failed to disburse in accordance with the escrow agreement.

Levine and Reichenthal are each charged with one count of conspiring to commit commodities fraud, which carries a maximum term of five years in prison, and one count of conspiring to commit wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

They also face two counts of commodities fraud, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, two counts of wire fraud, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and one count of money laundering, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

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New Investment Restrictions Coming for CalPERS CIO

The resignation of CalPERS CIO Ben Meng on ethics charges revolving around his investments spurred board to review new restrictions.


The board of the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) is ready to impose severe restrictions on the personal investments of its next chief investment officer.

The restrictions come after the resignation of CIO Ben Meng last month and a state ethics investigation into Meng’s holding of the stock of private equity firm Blackstone Group.

Meng gave approval to CalPERS’s investments of more than $700,000 into a Blackstone fund despite holding Blackstone stock. State rules required him to recuse himself from the investment decision.

The restrictions formally revealed Wednesday at a CalPERS board committee meeting by the pension plan’s administrative staff would be among the strictest in the US among institutional investors.

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The incoming CIO would be forced to sell all stock and potentially other investments or place them in a blind trust.

While at least six of the seven members of the CalPERS Performance, Compensation & Talent Management Committee said they support restrictions, committee members asked administrative staff to further refine the proposal for a vote at the committee’s mid-November meeting.

The plan would then go to the 13-member CalPERS board for almost certain approval.

The committee also asked administrative staff to examine placing investment restrictions on senior investment staffers working for CalPERS, the largest US pension plan with $415 billion in assets.

In addition, staff will also examine whether board members should be subject to the investment restrictions.

In the meantime,  the committee’s chairman, Rob Feckner, instructed administrative staff to tell search firm Korn Ferry, which is looking for a new CalPERS CIO, to inform potential candidates that they would be subject to investment restrictions.

CalPERS Chief Operating Officer Doug Hoffner assured Feckner that it was already being done.

“That has been shared with the recruiter,” he said. “The agenda item has been shared and has been included in discussions with potential individual candidates as they expressed interest in this process. So, I think you’re on the path that they’re not going to be surprised  or unaware of what this board is looking to do in the very near future.”

Hoffner also insisted that candidates for the spot were not being deterred by the expected investment restrictions.

For years, CalPERS had faced recruiting issues with its investment staff partially because it is located in Sacramento, a second-tier city that is not a financial center. The pension plan is also unable to pay the top-notch multi-million plus salaries that investment personnel can make in private firms.

One speaker at the committee meeting, Dillon Gibbons, senior legislative representative for the California Special Districts Association, said he was concerned about imposing investment restrictions.

He said CalPERS is already going to have problems recruiting the right person given its position away from the financial centers of New York and San Francisco.

“Sacramento is the intellectual capital of nothing,” he said.

He also questioned whether a top candidate for CIO would be willing to sell their investment holdings.

“The most qualified individuals would certainly use their investment knowledge to grow their personal wealth,” Gibbons added. “Then that’s a good thing. To limit that to beyond what’s currently in place would likely be seen as a significant pay cut.”

Committee members did not respond but seemed more concerned Wednesday about whether a new CIO could get around investment restrictions.

Committee member Stacey Olivares said the fact that investments were placed in a blind trust would not necessarily prevent a CIO from acting in his or her own self-interest when making investment decisions.

“I still know I have it, it can influence decision-making,” she said.

Another committee member, Margaret Brown, expressed concern that the CalPERS board was moving too fast without properly researching what other pension plans do in terms of investment restrictions on their CIO.

“This is a knee-jerk reaction to an oversight failure,” she said.

The oversight failure Brown was taking about is why Meng was able to allow CalPERS to invest in the Blackstone fund, despite investments of between $10,001 and $100,000 in Blackstone stock.

Meng made the disclosure that he owned Blackstone stock on a required state financial disclosure form.

He resigned several days after a blogger reported that he had failed to recuse himself from investment decisions despite holding stock.

Meng reported directly to CalPERS CEO Marcie Frost but its unclear when Frost became aware of the investment transgressions. Frost has maintained that Meng’s resignation is a confidential personnel matter.

CalPERS board president Henry Jones had said he was alerted by CalPERS executive staff about the matter and that the board was going to discuss it. He said Meng resigned before the discussion,  three days after the Naked Capitalism blog revealed conflicts of interests in his personal investments and the investment decisions he was making at CalPERS.

Two CalPERS board members, State Controller Betty Yee and Brown, have called for a public airing of Meng’s actions.

Jones had refused to allow for a public hearing.

Another fallout from the Meng resignation is Frost will now be sharing oversight of the new CIO with the CalPERS board. Meng had reported solely to Frost, but Wednesday the CalPERS board approved the new structure, and the hiring, termination and supervision of the CIO will be a shared responsibility.

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