Argent Capital Founder Faces Cftc Charges Over Alleged $14 Million Fraud
- The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has sued Trevor L.
- The agency filed its complaint in the US District Court for the Western District of North Carolina.
- It accuses the two defendants of hiding heavy losses while telling investors their money kept growing.
- The complaint covers conduct from at least March 2022 through February 2026.
What Happened
The agency filed its complaint in the US District Court for the Western District of North Carolina. It accuses the two defendants of hiding heavy losses while telling investors their money kept growing.
Vernon also reportedly misappropriated pool money. He allegedly paid earlier investors with funds from new ones, a hallmark of a Ponzi scheme.
“In addition, the complaint alleges Vernon knowingly made false statements during sworn testimony taken as part of the Commission’s investigation,” the CFTC said.
Market Context
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has sued Trevor L. Vernon and his firm, Argent Capital Management, over an alleged $14 million fraud involving a commodity pool that traded stock index futures, options, and crypto assets.
Vernon marketed himself as a skilled trader and claimed the pool was highly profitable. In reality, his trades resulted in steady and substantial losses, the CFTC alleges.
The CFTC wants restitution, disgorgement, civil penalties, and permanent trading and registration bans. It also seeks a court order stopping Vernon from further violations.
The post Argent Capital Founder Faces CFTC Charges Over Alleged $14 Million Fraud appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Why It Matters
Inside the Alleged Crypto Fraud Scheme
The complaint covers conduct from at least March 2022 through February 2026. Across that span, the defendants raised money from at least 60 participants, according to the filing.
Details
The defendants sent monthly emails and quarterly updates that showed rising account balances. Those gains never existed, the agency says.
The filing further cites several registration violations under the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA).
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The case fits a broader CFTC push against retail fraud. In March, enforcement director David Miller named Ponzi schemes and commodity pool fraud among the agency’s top priorities.
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