In hiding: Africrypt’s Cajee brothers say scam overblown – With insights from The Wall Street Journal

The South African cryptocurrency universe has been rocked in the last few weeks since a scandal arose surrounding two young brothers, Ameer and Raees Cajee, aged 18 and 21 respectively. The brothers have reportedly been running a cryptocurrency business since 2019 with clients allegedly including some of South Africa’s wealthiest, including decorated celebrities. The brothers sent an email to clients in April stating that funds were missing and that they would need time to retrieve the funds. Clients had subsequently contacted lawyers and the entire scandal unravelled. However, in an interview with our partners at The Wall Street Journal, the Cajee brothers stated that a fraction of the supposed ‘billions’ were missing. A must read below. – Justin Rowe-Roberts

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Raees Cajee, Blamed by Investors for Billions of Dollars in Crypto Losses, Says Fraction Is Missing

Investors have accused South African fund manager and his brother of disappearing with money following an alleged hacking incident

June 28, 2021 3:43 pm ET

A South African cryptocurrency entrepreneur, pursued by investors who allege that billions of dollars of their digital assets have vanished, says that less than $5 million is missing.

Raees Cajee, 21, and his 18-year old brother Ameer founded Africrypt in 2019, setting it up as a fund that invested in bitcoin and other crypto-tokens. But in April, Africyrpt said its systems were hacked and tokens were stolen. Lawyers hired by disgruntled investors say as much as $3.6 billion may be missing.

But Raees Cajee, in an interview on Monday from a location he wouldn’t disclose, said the firm’s portfolio was never remotely that big. “At the height of the market, we were managing just over $200 million,” Mr. Cajee said. He added that no more than $5 million is unaccounted for. Mr. Cajee said he and Ameer Cajee are in hiding because they have received death threats.

On April 13, Ameer Cajee, who is chief operating officer, sent a letter to clients saying that Africrypt’s systems, including clients’ accounts, were breached, according to investors. He said the firm had been forced to halt operations, and that the company would need “a substantial amount of time” to retrieve the missing funds. He urged investors to avoid taking legal action as that might delay the recovery of the money.

Investors quickly hired lawyers. One group retained a South African firm to try to figure out what happened to the tokens. Darren Hanekom, a lawyer at the firm, says he believes that Africrypt, or a syndicate of which it was a part, controlled a blockchain address that at one point held assets worth $3.6 billion but now holds nothing. Raees Cajee said Africrypt has never managed that much money for its clients.

Another group of investors hired a separate law firm to try to liquidate Africrypt and get their money back. Its clients are looking to recoup 140 million rand, equivalent to nearly $10 million, representatives for the law firm, Gerhard Botha Attorneys, said.

Raees Cajee said that he and his brother plan to return to South Africa to attend a July 19 court date tied to the liquidation proceedings for Africrypt.

“We dealt with a lot of high-level South Africans, a lot of politicians, a lot of high-level businessmen within South Africa, as well as celebrities,” Raees Cajee said in the interview. “Some particularly very, very dangerous people—that we had not actually known were clients—have started to come out of the cracks.”

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