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YL-008 Crypto Ponzi · Russia / Global 2021

Forsage — The Smart Contract Was the Fraud

Program
Forsage
Total Losses
$340M
Investors
Hundreds of thousands globally
Status
Convicted

Summary

Forsage, a cryptocurrency pyramid and Ponzi scheme built on Ethereum, Tron, and Binance Smart Chain smart contracts, extracted approximately $340 million from investors across dozens of countries between its January 2020 launch and subsequent regulatory and law enforcement action. The scheme was founded by Vladimir Okhotnikov — operating as "Lado" — alongside co-founders Olena Oblamska (operating as "Lola Ferrari"), Mikhail Sergeev, and Sergey Maslakov, all Russian nationals. Its central and defining marketing claim was that Forsage was "trustless" — because its mechanics ran on public smart contracts rather than a company-controlled server, the founders argued no central party could manipulate the system and investors were therefore safe. That claim was the fraud. The smart contract code was written by Okhotnikov and his associates, and that code systematically diverted investor funds to earlier participants rather than generating any return from external activity.

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged eleven individuals — the four founders and seven promoters — in August 2022, characterising Forsage as both a Ponzi and a pyramid scheme. The Department of Justice obtained a federal grand jury indictment in the District of Oregon in February 2023 charging all four founders with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Two SEC-charged promoters reached civil settlements with the commission. Okhotnikov, Sergeev, and Maslakov remain at large as of mid-2026; Okhotnikov is believed to be in Dubai. Olena Oblamska was extradited from Thailand to the United States in May 2026 and pleaded not guilty; her jury trial is scheduled for July 2026 in the District of Oregon. The prosecution is active but no criminal trial verdict has yet been returned against any Forsage founder.

The scale of the scheme — $340 million, confirmed by blockchain analysis of the smart contracts themselves — and its explicit use of decentralised blockchain infrastructure as a fraud delivery mechanism made it a landmark case for US regulators seeking to establish that the "trustless" framing of DeFi does not provide immunity from securities and wire fraud law.

Timeline

January 2020
Forsage launches on Ethereum
Vladimir Okhotnikov and co-founders deploy the Forsage smart contracts on Ethereum; the scheme is marketed as a "decentralized matrix ecosystem" with no central administrator, promising passive income through a pyramid of referral slots.
2020
Rapid global expansion
Forsage is promoted across YouTube, Telegram, Facebook, and in-person recruitment events in Russia, the United States, India, the Philippines, and across Southeast Asia; a US-based promoter network, including members operating under the "Crypto Crusaders" brand, distributes the scheme in English-language markets.
2020
Philippines SEC issues cease-and-desist
The Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission orders Forsage to cease operations in the Philippines, one of the earliest formal regulatory responses; the Forsage team publicly dismisses the order, arguing that a smart contract cannot be "ceased."
2020–2021
Forsage expands to Tron and Binance Smart Chain
The founders deploy additional contract versions on the Tron and Binance Smart Chain blockchains to access new investor pools and reduce dependence on Ethereum gas fees; all three contract implementations share the same structural diversion of investor funds to earlier participants.
August 1, 2022
SEC charges 11 individuals
The Securities and Exchange Commission files charges against the four founders and seven promoters — including US-based members of the Crypto Crusaders network — for operating a pyramid and Ponzi scheme in violation of securities law; the SEC characterises Forsage as having "all the hallmarks of a classic pyramid scheme." Two promoters, Samuel Ellis and Patrick Thiessen, reach civil settlements with the commission including disgorgement and penalties.
April 2023
DOJ stays SEC civil proceedings
The Department of Justice intervenes to stay the SEC's civil proceedings pending the outcome of parallel criminal prosecution.
February 22, 2023
Federal grand jury indictment
A grand jury in the District of Oregon returns an indictment charging Okhotnikov, Oblamska, Sergeev, and Maslakov with one count each of conspiracy to commit wire fraud; the indictment states that Forsage paid earlier investors with funds from later investors and that the smart contract code itself was the mechanism of that transfer.
2023–2024
Three founders remain at large
Okhotnikov, believed to be in Dubai, resurfaces in media and business contexts under his own name; Georgian authorities convict Okhotnikov in absentia in 2024 for laundering $1.1 million in Forsage proceeds and sentence him to ten years. Sergeev and Maslakov remain unlocated by US authorities.
May 2026
Oblamska extradited from Thailand
Olena Oblamska, who had been located in Thailand, is extradited to the United States and appears in the US District Court in Portland on May 11, 2026; she pleads not guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and is ordered detained pending trial.
July 14, 2026
Trial scheduled
Oblamska's jury trial in the District of Oregon is scheduled to begin; Okhotnikov, Sergeev, and Maslakov remain at large and uncharged before a US jury.

The Trustless Claim: Engineering Credibility Through Code

Forsage's founders understood that the primary obstacle to recruiting sophisticated investors into a pyramid scheme is the question of operator trust: what prevents the administrators from simply taking the money? Their answer was architecturally clever. By deploying the scheme's mechanics as smart contracts on public blockchains, they could point to open, readable, and immutable code as proof that no central party could interfere. "There are no admins who can block your wallet or limit your progress," Forsage's promotional materials stated. "Everything is transparent, decentralized and regulated by an unbreakable smart contract."

This framing exploited a genuine concern. Centralised custody fraud was already a well-documented risk by 2020, and Forsage appeared to solve it: the contracts were publicly readable on Etherscan. What the marketing did not explain was that "trustless" described the execution environment, not the design intent. The code itself determined where funds flowed, and the code was written to flow them to earlier participants.

Blockchain analysis confirmed the mechanism precisely. As soon as an investor sent cryptocurrency to a Forsage contract address, the smart contract automatically split and distributed those funds to the investor's recruiter and upward through the referral matrix. The DOJ indictment confirmed that Forsage paid earlier investors with funds from later investors — the textbook Ponzi structure — and that the diversion was hardcoded into the contract logic. There was no trading revenue, no DeFi yield, and no external income source. The "unbreakable smart contract" promoters cited as proof of integrity was the fraud mechanism itself.

Recruitment Architecture: Matrices, Slots, and the Crypto Crusaders

Forsage operated two parallel participation structures — internally designated "x3" and "x6" — each built on a matrix slot system. To enter, a participant paid Ethereum to fill a slot; payment was routed to the participant above them in the matrix tree. When a row filled, participants recycled into new slots. In both structures, the dominant income source was commission flows from recruiting new participants, not returns on deposited capital.

In the United States, the founders cultivated a network of English-language promoters who ran webinars, YouTube videos, and in-person events including a Las Vegas convention in late 2020. Four US-based individuals — including Crypto Crusaders co-founders Carlos Martinez and Ronald Deering, and co-hosts Cheri Beth Bowen and Alisha Sheppard — were charged by the SEC for their promotional roles. All four had been identified on Forsage's own website and paid commissions on investor flows they generated.

The Philippines SEC's 2020 cease-and-desist order, which the Forsage team publicly dismissed on the grounds that a smart contract cannot receive a government order, became a marketing asset in some circles — cited as proof that regulators were powerless against the new paradigm. That argument did not prevail in the DOJ indictment, which charged wire fraud: a statute that attaches to the conduct of the individuals who designed and promoted the scheme, not to the immutability of the code they deployed.

The Five Factors

01
Trustless architecture as a credibility mechanism
Forsage weaponised the legitimate concern of centralised custody fraud by offering an architecture that appeared to eliminate operator risk while embedding operator-designed fraud in the contract logic. Public blockchain infrastructure gave non-technical investors a false sense of verifiable security; they could confirm the code existed and was public but could not interpret what it did with their funds. Trust was not eliminated — it was displaced from a named operator to a code base that most investors could not audit.
02
Pyramid-plus-Ponzi compound structure
Forsage was simultaneously a pyramid scheme — income structurally dependent on recruiting new participants whose entry fees funded upward distributions — and a Ponzi, in that earlier investors were paid from later investors' capital rather than any external return. The combination allowed promoters to truthfully state that on-chain flows were real while obscuring that the system was mathematically certain to fail for the majority of participants.
03
Regulatory dismissal as promotional strategy
The founders' public dismissal of the Philippines SEC cease-and-desist order — framed as evidence that decentralised systems are immune from governmental control — simultaneously addressed investor concern and recruited a cohort who found the anti-establishment narrative appealing. Framing regulatory action as proof of decentralised legitimacy is an inversion of normal market oversight, and it is replicable in any blockchain-native context where operators can claim the relevant activity happens "on-chain."
04
Jurisdictional fragmentation across three blockchains
By deploying on Ethereum, Tron, and Binance Smart Chain, Forsage diversified both its investor base and its enforcement exposure. Each chain had a different regulatory posture and primary geographic user pool. Blockchain forensic tracing required investigators to account for fund flows across three separate ledgers and a global network of contract addresses. The incremental cost of adding a chain is minimal for operators; the incremental complexity for investigators is substantial.
05
Promoter network as liability firewall
By compensating a geographically distributed network of independent promoters, Forsage's founders inserted a layer of intermediaries between themselves and direct investor contact in the most regulated markets. US-based promoters handled English-language recruitment and bore the direct interface with American investors and regulators. When the SEC's 2022 charges named both founders and US-based individuals, the promoters' legal exposure differed in character: they had made specific representations to identifiable US investors while the founders remained physically abroad. The distributed promoter model diffuses accountability by design.

Aftermath

As of mid-2026, three of the four indicted founders — Vladimir Okhotnikov, Mikhail Sergeev, and Sergey Maslakov — are at large. Okhotnikov, the scheme's primary architect, is believed to be in Dubai. A Georgian court convicted him in absentia in 2024 on laundering charges tied to Forsage proceeds and sentenced him to ten years; that conviction has no enforcement mechanism in the UAE or Russia. Oblamska's trial, scheduled for July 2026 in the District of Oregon, will be the first US criminal proceeding to reach a jury verdict in the Forsage case.

Two US-based promoters — Samuel Ellis and Patrick Thiessen — reached SEC civil settlements requiring disgorgement and civil penalties. The remaining SEC-charged promoters had their proceedings stayed pending the criminal case outcome.

No investor recovery fund has been established. The $340 million in losses was distributed through the smart contract mechanics to earlier participants in the pyramid — meaning the funds were not held by a central operator at the time of enforcement, but had already been paid out through the scheme's own architecture. Recovery against individual earlier participants is legally and practically infeasible. The decentralised architecture Forsage used as its marketing proposition also functioned as a dissipation mechanism that made consolidated asset recovery impossible.

Lessons

  1. The term "trustless" in a blockchain context describes a property of the execution environment — code runs as written without administrator override — not a property of the code's design intent; a smart contract can be transparently and immutably fraudulent, and the transparency of its operation is not evidence of its legitimacy.
  2. An investment platform that pays participants from other participants' entry fees, regardless of whether that payment is intermediated by a smart contract or a bank transfer, is a Ponzi scheme; the delivery mechanism does not change the underlying financial structure.
  3. A regulator's cease-and-desist order or investor warning issued against a platform is not a jurisdiction-specific technicality; it is evidence that the platform has been found to be operating illegally in at least one formal regulatory review, and it is sufficient grounds to refuse participation regardless of how the platform frames the order.
  4. Promoter commissions tied to the dollar volume of new investor recruitment, paid by platforms claiming to offer passive income from automated returns, are structurally identical to pyramid scheme recruitment fees; the professional credentials or apparent sincerity of a promoter are not evidence of the platform's legitimacy.
  5. Geographic ambiguity of operators, multi-blockchain deployment, and absence of any regulated custodian are compounding risk flags that together indicate a scheme designed to be difficult to prosecute; investors should treat their simultaneous presence as disqualifying.

References