The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has initiated legal proceedings against Donald Basile, a crypto executive, accusing him and two companies under his control of misleading investors to raise approximately $16 million through false claims related to an 'insured' crypto token named Bitcoin Latinum. According to Cointelegraph, the complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, alleging that Basile orchestrated the scheme between March and December 2021 through Monsoon Blockchain Corp. and GIBF GP Inc. Investors were offered Simple Agreements for Future Tokens (SAFTs) with promises of future delivery of the token. Regulators claim that hundreds of investors were misled into believing the asset was backed and insured, although no insurance company provided coverage or proof of these claims.
The case is one of the few SEC enforcement actions under the Trump administration, which has adopted a more crypto-friendly regulatory stance compared to previous administrations. The SEC alleges that Basile repeatedly claimed Bitcoin Latinum was an insured, asset-backed cryptocurrency and that investor funds would bolster its underlying value. However, the complaint asserts that millions of dollars were diverted for personal expenditures, including real estate purchases, credit card payments, and the acquisition of a $160,000 horse. The regulator seeks permanent injunctions, repayment of allegedly ill-gotten gains with interest, civil penalties, and a ban on Basile’s involvement in securities offerings. Additionally, the SEC aims to impose an officer-and-director bar to prevent him from leading public companies in the future.
The Bitcoin Latinum website currently displays a 404 error, indicating it is not operational. Last week, the SEC criticized previous enforcement actions against crypto firms for not directly benefiting investors, focusing more on case volume rather than meaningful protection. Since fiscal 2022, the agency has initiated 95 actions and collected $2.3 billion in penalties for 'book-and-record' violations. However, several cases involving crypto registration and dealer definitions did not identify clear investor harm. The SEC stated that this approach reflected a misinterpretation of securities laws and a misallocation of enforcement resources. Under Chair Paul Atkins, appointed in 2025, the agency has shifted away from 'regulation by enforcement' and is now prioritizing fraud, market manipulation, and serious abuses of trust.