On April 24, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia announced that Tangeman had been sentenced to 70 months in prison for his role in a RICO conspiracy that, by all accounts, was less about organized crime and more about a group of young people who thought cryptocurrency was the universe’s answer to free money. Judge Kollar-Kotelly, perhaps inspired by the group’s “cartoonish” spending habits, added three years of supervised release to his sentence.
According to the DOJ, Tangeman’s crew operated from a network of online gaming friendships that somehow evolved into a full-blown cybercrime enterprise. Members took on roles ranging from “database hackers” to “residential burglars who steal hardware wallets”-a job description that probably included a lot of Googling “how to open a cold wallet with a butter knife.”
Laundering for the social engineering enterprise
Tangeman’s main contribution was converting stolen crypto into fiat with the precision of a toddler at a buffet. The group’s operation spanned multiple states and countries, proving that if you want to commit a $263 million fraud, the best place to start is your Discord server.
Their most notable achievement? A heist in August 2024 where they drained 4,100 Bitcoin from a D.C.-based investor. This was apparently the day someone forgot to set up two-factor authentication on their crypto wallet-or just assumed it was a game of Monopoly money.
Greed “borders on the cartoonish”
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro described the group’s lifestyle as “greed so brazen it borders on the cartoonish,” which is perhaps the most generous thing anyone has ever said about a $500,000 nightclub tab. Members, many of whom were unemployed and under 20, spent their ill-gotten gains on things like private jets, designer clothes, and security teams that probably included at least one guy in a tuxedo with a gun.
Their real estate portfolio included luxury mansions in Los Angeles, Miami, and the Hamptons, which they rented for amounts that would make a medieval king blush. They also collected exotic cars like Pokémon cards, including a widebody Lamborghini Urus gifted to Tangeman-a car so big it probably required its own ZIP code.
Obstruction and ongoing investigation
Tangeman’s sentence was extended because he tried to destroy evidence after his co-defendants got caught. This was, apparently, a poor career move, as it’s hard to get away with $263 million fraud when you’re busy deleting files like it’s a TikTok challenge.
The FBI and IRS-CI are still hunting the remaining members of the crew, including two who may currently be hiding in Dubai. If they’re there, they’re probably complaining about the humidity and wondering why their Lamborghini won’t fit in the hotel parking lot.
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2026-04-27 10:30