Donerade 500.000 onecoin!!!!
Vilken kurs GangsterQueen?
Hur omvandlar hon onecoin egentligen....
Ingen info om detta, som vanligt
Bhmlm Tim T
@Anjali – a ScamBuster who has been following the Onecoin/ One World Foundation fraud posted this response to my comment regarding Pencils of Promise being taken off the OWF PAGE
Ari Widell26 August 2016 at 10:00
It wouldn’t be SO bad if the OWF really would be a sincere charity organisation. Instead what we have is a marketing tool for OneCoin and a PR machine for Ruja Ignatova in Bulgaria.
As a charity organisation OWF is as credible as the ponzi scheme it’s serving. The icing on the cake is that the organisation is ran by Ruja Ignatova herself and her mother.
oneworldfoundation.eu/en/aboutus/meettheowfteam
Interestingly the top scammers – who are claimed earning big bucks from this scam – make their own donations to OWF with the worthless onecoins which can’t be used for any charity whatsoever:
“Dr. Ruja Ignatova’s Fundraising Birthday Party
Due the increasing interest to our One World Foundation during the past few weeks we are happy to announce that on special ceremony during the celebration for Dr. Ruja Ignatova’s birthday were given the first Donation Certificates to Mr. Sebastian Greenwood, Mr. Juha Parhiala and Mr. Vincent Ta, who made major contribution (500 000 OneCoins) to the One World Foundation during the Dubai event.”
What’s quite funny, I have never seen those 500.000 onecoins on this counter: imgur.com/a/oViFN
– OneCoin doesn’t even bother to register their own toy money donations.
The most pressing question, obviously, is what the hell does a “generous donation of 500,000 Onecoin” even mean?!?!?
According to Onecoin, it would be the equivalent donation of $3.5MM. Yet, if Ruja herself valued 1,160 Onecoin at exactly 550€ for the OneLife tablet, what amount of REAL MONEY was actually “donated to charity?”
MORE SIGNIFICANTLY, AND PERHAPS LEGALLY, if 500,000 OC were announced publicly to the world (or affiliates) to have been moved from Senastian, Juha and Mr. Vincent Ta’s account to OWF’s “charity fund,” would the charity have legal fiduciary responsibility to “exchange the *currency immediately into fiat, in order to put it to use, within a reasonable period of time, in order to fund some of its charitable operations? (I think there could be a story here!)
Two of the largest charitable organizations in the world, The American Red Cross, and The United Way, both accept bitcoin. However, since charities are not typically in the business of “speculating,” as far as I know, both use the BitPay platform to handle their merchant transactions.
BitPay, as the largest, and one of the few Merchant Services Processors, exchanges currency from bitcoin to fiat for a 1% fee (possibly less for registered 501 c3 charities).
This cuts 2/3 off of many major credit card processors, like VISA, MasterCard, etc. If $100 is donated, the charity receives at least $99 (less a small $0.15 ACH transfer fee imposed by the banks to make the final deposit into the account holder’s bank account).
Furthermore, despite how Ruja’s misleading statements about merchants absorbing any losses due to bitcoin volatility between the time BTC is exchanged for USD, EURO, Rubles, etc., BitPay guarantees the amount paid will be the amount received (less 1% and $0.15 3rd party ACH bank fee).
At what rate of exchange did 500,000 Onecoin become exchanged for charitable causes? How was that exchange facilitated? What was the transaction fee in relation to the promoted “Price(value)” of the 500,000 OC, and whom was the recipient?
Certainly earthquake victims in Italy or blond kids in Canada can’t do anything with 500,000 OC! Where did it go? Why was this not promoted more? And why does it not even show up on their own OWF “donations page?!?!?”
Would this be considered criminal? Thoughts, anyone?