Sacramento Jury Nails Ex-Tahoe Local In Nearly $1 Million Crypto Con

A federal jury in Sacramento has convicted a former El Dorado County resident of running what prosecutors say was a tangle of crypto and investment scams that drained nearly $1 million from investors. After an eight-day trial, jurors agreed that Daniel Chartraw used sham companies touting guaranteed returns, with no legitimate trading to back up the big promises. Chartraw, who has ties to South Lake Tahoe and Lodi, is set to return to federal court this fall for sentencing.

How prosecutors described the scheme

According to evidence presented at trial, between March 2021 and February 2022 Chartraw and his associates controlled companies including Crypto-Pal LLC and TDA Global LLC. Prosecutors said the firms were pitched as slick, web-based trading platforms offering high, supposedly guaranteed returns, but behind the scenes there was no real investing going on.

Chartraw instead relied on fabricated account statements and repeated misrepresentations to keep money flowing in and to persuade existing investors to put up more cash, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. “This verdict sends a clear message: individuals who exploit the trust of others and steal through deception will be held accountable,” U.S. Attorney Eric Grant said in a statement.

How victims were targeted

Jurors heard that Chartraw communicated with investors by phone, text, email and virtual meetings, sometimes using the aliases “Leonard” or “Leon” to disguise his role in the operation. As reported by The Sacramento Bee, evidence showed he repeatedly dipped into Crypto-Pal’s bank account to withdraw cash, make purchases and shift investor funds into accounts he personally controlled.

Prosecutors told the jury those maneuvers added up to nearly $1 million in losses for investors scattered across the country, many of whom believed they were watching successful trades rack up on polished online dashboards.

Sentencing and penalties

Chartraw, 53, is scheduled to be sentenced by Senior U.S. District Judge William B. Shubb on Sept. 28, 2026. He faces statutory maximum penalties of up to 20 years in prison and fines of up to $250,000 for each count, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office…

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