What seemed like a fast and easy way to wealth has ended in silence, heartbreak, and monumental loss for over 600,000 Nigerians who invested in CryptoBridge Exchange (CBEX), a fraudulent digital investment scheme that has now crashed and disappeared without a trace. The collapse, which occurred in April, has triggered a flood of reports from across the country, with many victims only realising the scam when they could no longer log in to their dashboards or access their funds.As panic spread, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) began investigations into CBEX and its promoters, vowing to trace the stolen funds. But on Thursday, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dealt a devastating blow to victims’ hopes by confirming that CBEX was never licensed to operate within Nigeria’s capital market and had no legal authority to solicit investments from the public. According to the SEC, CBEX and its affiliates were never registered with the commission, yet they posed as a legitimate digital asset exchange using fake documents, aggressive marketing, and unrealistic promises of guaranteed high returns.Preliminary findings show that CBEX was nothing more than a sophisticated Ponzi scheme, cleverly marketed to exploit public trust and desperation. The promoters used glossy media coverage, forged regulatory certificates, and the illusion of foreign backing to lure unsuspecting Nigerians. As complaints surged and investors attempted to withdraw their money, CBEX locked users out, shut down its offices, and disappeared from the radar.One of the key figures behind the scam is Harold David Charles, a 55-year-old British national and the owner of ST Investment Co. Ltd. The company positioned itself as a major partner of CBEX, launching a PR blitz between January 27 and 28 that portrayed Charles as a seasoned investment guru and digital finance expert. Archived media reports painted a rosy picture of CBEX as a futuristic crypto trading platform supported by ST Technologies International — a company registered with Nigeria’s Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and allegedly issued an anti-money laundering certificate from the EFCC’s Special Control Unit Against Money Laundering (SCUML).However, none of this legitimacy translated to reality. CBEX was never a registered company, and its operations were built on the back of shell firms like Smart Treasure and Super Technology — all suspiciously linked by the “S.T.” initials. These companies acted as decoys, giving the illusion of a vast network of credible affiliates.In February, one of CBEX’s Nigerian promoters, Abiodun, launched an office in Abuja, rallying people to join what he described as a platform where “we trade every day, make money, and live a good life.” Just months earlier in Lagos, the same promoters hosted a poorly attended seminar encouraging attendees to invite their “friends and enemies” to sign up, quit their jobs, and earn a month’s salary in a single day. The pitch worked. Thousands signed up, and billions flowed into the platform — until it all vanished.Among the victims is popular Fuji musician Taye Currency, who revealed that he lost ₦10 million to the scam and fears the stress might affect his health. “I may develop high blood pressure,” he confessed. In another heartbreaking account, a kulikuli seller shared how she lost her entire savings to CBEX, hoping it would help her build a better life. Meanwhile, reports are surfacing that a spin-off platform called PCEX continued operating even after CBEX crashed, pretending to be functional while allegedly scamming new investors.CBEX’s crash has become one of Nigeria’s largest and most devastating financial scams in recent history, wiping out ₦1.3 trillion in just a few months. While investigations continue, the SEC has warned that recovering victims’ funds may be impossible, leaving a bitter lesson in the wake of the digital gold rush: if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
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