According to Cointelegraph, Nicholas Truglia, a convicted crypto scammer, has had his prison sentence extended to 12 years after failing to repay a victim he targeted in 2018. Initially sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2022, Truglia was ordered to pay over $20 million in restitution to Michael Terpin, a crypto investor and CEO of Transform Group. Despite demonstrating a willingness to repay the stolen amount at sentencing, Truglia evaded law enforcement and judicial efforts to enforce his restitution obligation. Judge Alvin Hellerstein noted in a July 2 order that Truglia owned assets worth over $61 million, far exceeding the restitution obligations, yet made no payments.
Truglia's initial sentence included three years of supervised release in addition to the 18-month prison term and restitution. He was convicted of one count of wire fraud for using a SIM-swapping scam to compromise Terpin’s cellphone and steal his cryptocurrency. SIM-swapping involves transferring a victim’s phone number to another SIM card, allowing the scammer to receive authentication messages from service providers, including crypto exchanges and banks. This tactic was used by Truglia to target investors in California’s San Francisco Bay Area in 2018.
In the same year, Terpin filed a $224 million lawsuit against AT&T, his wireless carrier, for negligence in allowing Truglia to compromise his cell phone. Terpin lost $24 million in cryptocurrency due to the SIM-swapping scheme. Additionally, he filed a $75 million civil lawsuit against Truglia and was awarded full damages by the court in 2019. The case highlights the vulnerabilities in mobile security and the severe consequences of SIM-swapping scams in the cryptocurrency sector.