By Amy Castor
2 min read
In a new court filing today, US prosecutors submitted a list of bank accounts subject to forfeitures in an ongoing case against Reginald Fowler, the Arizona businessman and ex-Minnesota Viking minority owner charged with operating a shadow banking operation.
Fowler is linked to the missing $850 million that crypto exchange Bitfinex has been accused of hiding. The exchange claims the money was deposited with Panamanian payment processor Crypto Capital Corp and then seized—through no fault of Bitfinex—by law enforcement in the US, Poland, and Portugal. According to feds, Fowler has access to $350 million stashed in some 60 bank accounts all over the world.
The latest court document is part of a superseding indictment filed against Fowler in a Manhattan court in February, which added a fifth charge of wire fraud and claimed that he obtained money through “false and fraudulent pretenses” to fund a professional sports league.
Fowler invested $25 million in the failed Alliance of American Football right before its inaugural season and shortly before his arrest on April 30, 2019.
The Bill of Particulars lists 56 bank accounts at some of the world's top financial institutions, including:
Several bank accounts are held in Fowler’s own name while others are held under the following company names:
The court filing also names two other defendants: "Oz Yousf"—presumably a misspelling of Oz Yosef, a principal at Crypto Capital—and his sister Ravid Yosef, Fowler's alleged "co-conspirator." Oz was indicted on three criminal counts last year following the arrest of the president of Crypto Capital. Both Oz and his sister are still at large.
As for Fowler, he is currently living in Chandler, Arizona, free on $5 million bail. His trial is set for January 2021.
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