The Guardian Australia published an investigation several months ago into a crypto scheme-slash-scam called HyperVerse, a fund that used major celebrity endorsements to attract millions of dollars from small investors before collapsing. Blockchain Global went bust owing $58 million USD in 2021, but now there's a rather classic fraudster sting in the tail: The CEO who promoted this scheme doesn't seem to be a real person.
HyperVerse was promoted by Blockchain Global co-founders Sam Lee and Ryan Xu, both of whom have been referred to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission: Lee denies HyperVerse was a scam and disputes his founding status, Xu has said nothing. But the company's CEO was one Steven Reece Lewis, who appeared at the scheme's launch in late 2021 alongside video messages supporting HyperVerse from, among others, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and actor Chuck Norris.
Steven Reece Lewis, according to HyperVerse, had graduated from the University of Leeds, had a master's degree from Cambridge, had sold a company to Adobe and launched an IT start-up firm, etcetera. He'd also found time to cram-in a stint at Goldman Sachs (memorably described by Matt Taibbi as «a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money») before apparently being headhunted by HyperVerse.
Lewis appeared in the HyperVerse launch video and you can watch him below. I invite you to consider whether this is a Cambridge graduate and Goldman Sachs operator, or a jobbing actor who doesn't quite realise what he's signed up for: note especially the pronunciation of «HyperVerse».
Problem is… none of these esteemed institutions have ever heard of Steven Reece
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