Help us retrieve our monies – Victims of crypto-currency scam tell gov’t
Customers of cryptocurrency company, Global Coin Community Help, are calling on government to help them retrieve their locked-up monies from the company.
The customers said all their efforts by to get their monies back have been unsuccessful.
Global Coin Community Help is among six (6) financial intuitions the Bank of Ghana cautioned the public to be wary of in December 2018, although their problems had started months earlier.
By January, there were already many complaints from customers that they were unable to retrieve their monies from the company.
Earlier reports showed that Global Coin Community Help swindled more than 110,000 customers of their deposits last year.
Total deposits in the company was estimated to be about GH¢ 135 million.
An aggrieved customer of the company in a Citi News interview said they wanted government assist to bring the managers of the company to book as they had swindled many Ghanaians.
He said if the matter is not adequately addressed, it may rise to the level of the Menzgold saga where many Ghanaians have lost huge investments to the company which is unable to pay customers their monies.
“We are not asking the government to pay us, but government needs to help us retrieve our money because we believe that if the security agencies were doing their work well, and they know the credibility of this institution, things wouldn’t have gone this far,” he said.
“What it will eventually lead to is what is happening with Menzgold that out of frustration, people will now get desperate. People are looking for the man, people are looking for his family. People are really looking for him but they can’t have access to him,” Kwaku Agyemang, a spokesperson for some of the victims told Citi News.
The Economic and Organized Crime Office (EOCO) in November last year, initiated investigations into the issue as it announced it had invited two directors of the company, Kwaku Damete Kumi and David Opatey for questioning.
However Mr. Agyemang told Citi Business News EOCO is taking too long in its investigations.
Source: citinewsroom