Cryptocurrency firm Goliath Ventures has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after its CEO was arrested in connection with a $328 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded over 2,000 investors across three years.
The company, formerly known as Gen-Z Venture Firm, filed for bankruptcy on March 16, 2026 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida. Court filings listed assets between $1 million and $10 million against liabilities of $100 million to $500 million, revealing a staggering gap that suggests investors may recover only a fraction of their funds.
Christopher Alexander Delgado, president and CEO of Goliath Ventures, was arrested on February 24, 2026 on a federal criminal complaint charging him with wire fraud and money laundering. He faces up to 30 years in federal prison if convicted.
Goliath Ventures Promised 3%-8% Monthly Returns Through Fake Liquidity Pools
According to the federal complaint, the scheme operated from January 2023 through January 2026, raising at least $328 million from victims who were promised monthly returns of 3% to 8% through cryptocurrency "liquidity pools." Those claims were false.
Instead of investing client funds, Delgado allegedly used incoming capital to pay earlier investors, refund principal to maintain the appearance of legitimacy, and fund personal expenses. The classic Ponzi structure relied on a constant flow of new money to sustain payouts.
Federal investigators found that Delgado purchased four residential properties with victim funds, valued between approximately $1.15 million and $8.5 million each. He also allegedly funded lavish business events, luxury travel, and holiday parties with investor money.
The case was investigated jointly by IRS Criminal Investigation and Homeland Security Investigations. U.S. Attorney Gregory W. Kehoe announced the arrest, with the prosecution handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Richard Varadan, Noah P. Dorman, and Hannah Nowalk Watson.
IRS Criminal Investigation posted the arrest announcement on X, drawing attention to the scale of the alleged fraud:
#ICYMI FL man Christopher Delgado, president and CEO of Goliath Ventures, was arrested on a criminal complaint alleging a $328M crypto-based Ponzi scheme.
— IRS Criminal Investigation (@IRS_CI) February 26, 2026
Click for more on the case and potential victim recourse: https://t.co/rCI6iTisJT#IRSCI #WhatWeDoCounts #FollowTheMoney pic.twitter.com/phvbe9Ue9J
Source: @IRS_CI on X
The promised returns of 3% to 8% per month should have been a red flag for investors. Annualized, that translates to returns of 36% to 96%, far exceeding what legitimate cryptocurrency yield strategies produce. In an environment where the Crypto Fear & Greed Index currently sits at 12, deep in "Extreme Fear" territory, these kinds of fraud cases amplify broader investor anxiety across the market.
JPMorgan Chase Faces Class Action Over Alleged Role in Enabling the Scheme
Beyond the criminal case against Delgado, a class-action lawsuit was filed on March 10, 2026 against JPMorgan Chase in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The suit alleges the bank provided banking infrastructure to Goliath Ventures while ignoring anti-money-laundering red flags.
The JPMorgan angle distinguishes this case from typical crypto fraud collapses. Major banks are facing increasing scrutiny over their crypto relationships, even as firms like Goldman Sachs hold significant positions in crypto ETFs. If successful, the Goliath Ventures lawsuit could set a precedent for holding traditional financial institutions accountable when they facilitate alleged crypto schemes.
That question has gained urgency as stablecoins increasingly bridge traditional finance and crypto, making the boundaries between banking and digital asset custody less distinct.
What Defrauded Investors Face Next
The Chapter 11 filing allows Goliath Ventures to reorganize under court supervision, but the asset-to-liability gap paints a grim picture for recovery. With assets of just $1 million to $10 million against liabilities potentially exceeding $100 million, investors face the prospect of recovering pennies on the dollar.
Delgado's criminal case in the Middle District of Florida runs in parallel with the bankruptcy proceedings in the Southern District of Florida and the JPMorgan class action in Northern California. Affected investors will need to file claims through the bankruptcy court as the proceedings advance.
The scale of this collapse, $328 million across more than 2,000 victims, ranks it among the larger crypto Ponzi schemes in recent years. It arrives during a period of already elevated market stress, with Bitcoin ETF outflows hitting $225 million and institutional flows reflecting caution across digital assets.
For crypto investors, the Goliath Ventures case reinforces a fundamental principle: promised returns that sound too good to be true typically are. Monthly yields of 3% to 8% from "liquidity pools" with no verifiable on-chain activity should prompt immediate skepticism, regardless of how professional the operation appears.
The federal investigation remains ongoing. Investors who believe they were affected can find victim recourse information through the U.S. Department of Justice case page for United States v. Christopher Alexander Delgado.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.