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ximmy
14th November 2013, 02:23 PM
100,000 stolen from 4000wallets

http://www.techworm.in/2013/11/another-bitcoin-exchange-from-czech.html (http://www.techworm.in/2013/11/another-bitcoin-exchange-from-czech.html)

Bitcoin Exchange based in Czech Republic, was hacked, causing more than 4000 bitcoin wallets to be compromised. The exchange (bitcash.cz (http://bitcash.cz/)) said on evening of November 11th there servers were breached by some Anonymous hackers.


Bitcash said hackers used their emails to send mails to their users asking them to send 2 BTC to wallet cause company have suffered a breach and have to use a U.S recovery company to get back the cash.
Company have warned their users on Facebook page for any such fraud mails, but still hackers were manage to stole $100,000 from over 4000 bitcoin wallets.
This is not the first time when any Bitcoin exchange have been compromised, just few days back
Chinese Bitcoin exchange GBL shutdown, taking away more than $4.1 virtual currency of users away with them.
Before that a similar case was found in Australia when Australian Bitcoin Exchange Tradefortress closed with $1 Million in Bitcoin fund missing.
Time to time hackers are targeting Bitcoin exchanges and wallets, have currency exchange with Bitcoins become safe enough for users to trust them.

ximmy
14th November 2013, 02:26 PM
$4.1 million goes missing as Chinese bitcoin trading platform GBL vanishes
Bitcoin is surging in China, but the explosion in digital currency trading has been accompanied by possible fraud and theft.
GBL, a Chinese bitcoin trading platform that claimed to be based in Hong Kong, recently shut down – an event that might not be worthy of note had ¥25m ($4.1m) worth of users’ money not disappeared with it.
The company appears to have launched in May 2013, with its domain btc-glb.com registered on 9th May and a post later that month (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=217454.0) by Bitcoin Talk forum user zhaoxianpeng promoting the site.
SuspicionsCommenters were instantly suspicious, noting that the site’s server was based in Beijing despite the site’s claim to being based in Hong Kong.


http://www.coindesk.com/4-1m-goes-missing-chinese-bitcoin-trading-platform-gbl-vanishes/

Ares
14th November 2013, 02:27 PM
Beat me too it... LOL


http://www.coindesk.com/4-1m-goes-missing-chinese-bitcoin-trading-platform-gbl-vanishes/

investing and trading in BTC's is extremely risky. Have to be very careful that the exchanges you sign up for are secure and reputable. If not, you're just asking to have something happen. It wasn't a big deal when BTC's were only worth 5-10 bucks a piece. It becomes a financial hardship if you have thousands / millions stolen because the exchange was too incompetent to protect its users.

But to be fair, NASDAQ has gone down how many times this year? 2-3 times? Even the big guys with Trillion dollar market caps aren't immune to human fuck ups.

EE_
14th November 2013, 02:27 PM
100,000 stolen from 4000wallets

http://www.techworm.in/2013/11/another-bitcoin-exchange-from-czech.html (http://www.techworm.in/2013/11/another-bitcoin-exchange-from-czech.html)

Bitcoin Exchange based in Czech Republic, was hacked, causing more than 4000 bitcoin wallets to be compromised. The exchange (bitcash.cz (http://bitcash.cz/)) said on evening of November 11th there servers were breached by some Anonymous hackers.


Bitcash said hackers used their emails to send mails to their users asking them to send 2 BTC to wallet cause company have suffered a breach and have to use a U.S recovery company to get back the cash.
Company have warned their users on Facebook page for any such fraud mails, but still hackers were manage to stole $100,000 from over 4000 bitcoin wallets.
This is not the first time when any Bitcoin exchange have been compromised, just few days back
Chinese Bitcoin exchange GBL shutdown, taking away more than $4.1 virtual currency of users away with them.
Before that a similar case was found in Australia when Australian Bitcoin Exchange Tradefortress closed with $1 Million in Bitcoin fund missing.
Time to time hackers are targeting Bitcoin exchanges and wallets, have currency exchange with Bitcoins become safe enough for users to trust them.

Call the cops!
Oh, wait...asking for protection is like asking for regulation. Can't have that.
This is the wild west.

ximmy
14th November 2013, 02:29 PM
$250,000 worth of Bitcoins stolen in net heist 2012


Last night, a few of our servers were compromised. As a result, the attacker gained accesses to an unencrypted backup of the wallet keys (the actual keys live in an encrypted area). Using these keys they were able to transfer the coins. This attack took the vast majority of the coins BitFloor was holding on hand. As a result, I have paused all exchange operations.

A security breach at a purveyor of virtual currency Bitcoins (http://bitcoin.org/) (BTC) has resulted in the loss of very real dollars totaling around $250,000. Bitfloor, a major banking and exchange service for Bitcoins, may be facing shutdown after nearly their entire inventory was stolen.

http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/250-000-worth-bitcoins-stolen-net-heist-980871

ximmy
14th November 2013, 02:31 PM
Bit-heist: Over $1mn in bitcoins stolen from Australian online bank


An Australian bitcoin bank holding over US$1 million of the crypto-currency has been hacked, leaving an unknown number of users with nothing – one of the largest thefts in the currency’s four-year history.
The incident took place on October 26, when the bank was hacked, with 4,100 bitcoins valued at $1.3 million stolen, the service’s operator only known as ‘Tradefortress’ said. He refused to give his name to the press, also stressing he was not much older than 18.

It took the bank’s owner two weeks to notify the affected customers.

http://rt.com/news/bitcoin-hacking-stolen-million-417/

EE_
14th November 2013, 02:32 PM
Major Bitcoin theft from website, claims owner
8 November 2013 Last updated at 11:22 ET

Bitcoin 'at risk' of network attack
Man cashes in on $22 Bitcoin stash

A man who ran an online "wallet service" for storing Bitcoins has claimed hackers stole virtual currency from his site worth more than one million Australian dollars.

The Australian man said 4,100 Bitcoins (US$1.04m, £650,000) were taken in two separate attacks.

He said he would not report the theft to police as Bitcoin transactions are virtually impossible to trace.

This has led some users to speculate whether it was an "inside job".

In a radio interview with ABC News the man, who only used his online name TradeFortress, denied being involved.

The Bitcoin virtual currency is increasingly used to pay for things online.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the theft occurred on 26 October but users were only alerted this week via a message he posted on the wallet service's website.

"I know this doesn't mean much, but I'm sorry, and saying that I'm very sad that this has happened is an understatement.

"Please don't store Bitcoins on an internet-connected device, regardless if it is your own or a service's."

Bitcoin is the most well known of a handful of virtual currencies. The currencies are developed through a computer process called "mining" and can be traded on exchanges or privately between users.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24871444

Ares
14th November 2013, 02:35 PM
Major Bitcoin theft from website, claims owner
8 November 2013 Last updated at 11:22 ET

Bitcoin 'at risk' of network attack
Man cashes in on $22 Bitcoin stash

A man who ran an online "wallet service" for storing Bitcoins has claimed hackers stole virtual currency from his site worth more than one million Australian dollars.

The Australian man said 4,100 Bitcoins (US$1.04m, £650,000) were taken in two separate attacks.

He said he would not report the theft to police as Bitcoin transactions are virtually impossible to trace.

This has led some users to speculate whether it was an "inside job".

In a radio interview with ABC News the man, who only used his online name TradeFortress, denied being involved.

The Bitcoin virtual currency is increasingly used to pay for things online.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the theft occurred on 26 October but users were only alerted this week via a message he posted on the wallet service's website.

"I know this doesn't mean much, but I'm sorry, and saying that I'm very sad that this has happened is an understatement.

"Please don't store Bitcoins on an internet-connected device, regardless if it is your own or a service's."

Bitcoin is the most well known of a handful of virtual currencies. The currencies are developed through a computer process called "mining" and can be traded on exchanges or privately between users.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24871444

I read that, the bitcointalk thread that discusses this believes the owner actually stole it. He won't publish the logs, and was very deceptive to questions others were asking him. So if there is a theft, it was most likely from the site owner.

EE_
14th November 2013, 02:38 PM
They should look in Pago Pago...that's where I'd be if I made off with the loot.

$1.3 Million in Bitcoin Stolen in Major Online Robbery
By Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai/2013-11-08 18:15:45 UTC

Cybercriminals have stolen $1.3 million dollars' worth of Bitcoin from inputs.io, a company that let users store the digital currency in online wallets, the site's founder claimed in a message on the site on Friday that started with a frowning emoticon.

The founder, known only as TradeFortress, wrote that cybercriminals hacked into his site on two different occasions and stole 4,100 BTC, the equivalent of $1.3 million. If true, this would be one of the 15 biggest robberies in Bitcoin's history, according to one list of Bitcoin heists (the biggest theft involved 263,024 BTC).

See also: Bitcoin Researchers: You Can Game the System

The hackers gained access to the site's database by disguising their identities through a social engineering attack, TradeFortress told Wired.

TradeFortress explained in an announcement that the hackers broke into the site's hosting account by compromising a series of email accounts. They were even able to bypass two-factor authentication, exploiting a flaw on the host server.

The hacks occurred on Oct. 23 and Oct. 26, but TradeFortress only began notifying the affected users this week. In a post in the BitcoinTalk forums, TradeFortress informed theft victims that refunds are on the way, but that the site doesn't have enough funds "to pay everyone fully."

Given the fact that Bitcoin are extremely hard to trace, chances are slim that the hackers will be caught.Given the fact that Bitcoin are extremely hard to trace, chances are slim that the hackers will be caught. But some suspect the heist may have been contrived by TradeFortress to steal customers' digital currency. But TradeFortress has denied these accusations in an interview with ABC Australia.

After the heist, TradeFortress said the site is effectively dead and issued a warning to Bitcoin owners who use online wallets instead of storing them locally on computers.

"I don't recommend storing any Bitcoins accessible on computers connected to the Internet," TradeFortress wrote in the BitcoinTalk forum.

EE_
14th November 2013, 02:40 PM
I read that, the bitcointalk thread that discusses this believes the owner actually stole it. He won't publish the logs, and was very deceptive to questions others were asking him. So if there is a theft, it was most likely from the site owner.

Sure it was. That's why I'd like you to help me set up a site so we can do it too.
Pago Pago awaits us!

EE_
14th November 2013, 02:44 PM
List of events by BTC value stolen
In this section, each theft is listed along with its rank, severity, and time, ordered by the highest mBTC value stolen from most severe to least. To navigate to a theft, simply click on the link.


Critical (≥10 kBTC)
Rank Name Time Severity
1 Bitcoin Savings and Trust 2011–2012 est. 263024 BTC
2 MyBitcoin Theft July 2011 78739.58205388 BTC
3 Linode Hacks March 2012 l.b. 46653.46630495 BTC
4 July 2012 Bitcoinica Theft July 2012 40000.00000000 BTC
5* May 2012 Bitcoinica Hack May 2012
Unresolved as of December 2012 18547.66867623 BTC
39000 BTC total impact
6 Silk Road Seizure October 2013 27618.69843217 BTC
7 Allinvain Theft June 2011 25000.01000000 BTC
8 Tony Silk Road Scam April 2012 est. 30000 BTC
9 Bitfloor Theft September 2012 u.b. 24086.17219307 BTC
10 Bitomat.pl Loss August 2011 est. 17000 BTC
11 Bitcoin7 Hack October 2011 est. 11000 BTC u.b. 15000 BTC
* Rank includes pass-through impact

Major (≥1 kBTC)
Rank Name Time Severity
12 Cdecker Theft September 2012 9222.21195900 BTC
13 Stefan Thomas Loss June 2011 est. 7000 BTC
14 BTC-E Hack July 2012 est. 4500 BTC
15 Mass MyBitcoin Thefts June 2011 4019.42939378 BTC
16 Mooncoin Theft September 2011 est. 4000 BTC
16 Kronos Hack Unknown est. 4000 BTC
16 Bitcoin Rain 2011–2013 est. 4000 BTC
19 2012 Trojan September through November 2012 3500 BTC a. 3457 BTC
20 Betcoin Theft April 2012 3171.50195016 BTC
21 June 2011 Mt. Gox Incident June 2011 l.b. 2643.27 BTC
* October 2011 Mt. Gox Loss October 2011 2609.36304319 BTC
* Andrew Nollan Scam February 2012 l.b. 2211.07786728 BTC
22 Bit LC Theft February 2013 est. 2000 BTC
23 Bitcoin Syndicate Theft July 2012 1852.61553553 BTC
24 ZigGap 2012 a. 1708.65967460 BTC
25 Just Dice Incident July 2013 a. 1300 BTC
26 BTCGuild Incident March 2013 a. 1254 BTC
* Ubitex Scam 2011 a. 1138.98 BTC
* Bitscalper Scam 2012 est. 1000 BTC
* Unranked because USD value at time does not meet cutoff.

Borderline (<1 kBTC)
Rank Name Time Severity
27 2013 Fork March 2013 960.09645667 BTC
28 Ozcoin Theft April 2013 922.99063322 BTC


List of events by USD equivalent of mBTC at time of theft
NB: This section is outdated.

This section houses a list of thefts, from most severe to least, by the USD equivalent of mBTC at that time. Note that USD values stolen, if any, are not included, only the mBTC value.

1. Bitcoin Savings & Trust (1834303 $)
2. MyBitcoin Theft (1110544 $)
3. Allinvain Theft (502750.20 $)
4. July 2012 Bitcoinica Theft (305200 $)
5. Bitfloor Theft (248088 $)
6. Linode Hacks (230468 $)
7. Bitomat.pl Loss (236000 $)
8. Tony Silk Road Scam (150000 $)
9. Stefan Thomas Loss (128000 $)
10. Just-Dice.com Incident (121000 $)
11. Cdecker Theft (113894 $)
12. May 2012 Bitcoinica Hack (91306.46 $)
13. XBTGuild Incident (58737 $)
14. Bit LC Theft (51000 $)
15. Bitcoin7 Hack (50000 $)
16. June 2011 Mt. Gox Incident (46970.91 $)
17. BTC-E Hack (42000 $)
18. 2012 Trojan (38000 $)
19. Mooncoin Theft (24000 $)
20. Betcoin Theft (15509 $)
21. Bitcoin Syndicate Theft (12134.61 $)
U. Ubitex Scam (11668.70 $)
U. Andrew Nollan Scam (10978 $)
U. October 2011 Mt. Gox Loss (8115.12 $)
U. Bitscalper Scam (5000 $)

ximmy
14th November 2013, 02:48 PM
Mine were taken in one of the 2011 Mt. Gox thefts... I'd have to double check that.

Ares
14th November 2013, 03:49 PM
Mine were taken in one of the 2011 Mt. Gox thefts... I'd have to double check that.

As a promoter of Bitcoins I also think having the list of thefts scams and security issues related to Bitcoins is an important topic

Ximmy if you don't mind me asking, how many of your coins did you have taken?

ximmy
14th November 2013, 06:02 PM
As a promoter of Bitcoins I also think having the list of thefts scams and security issues related to Bitcoins is an important topic

Ximmy if you don't mind me asking, how many of your coins did you have taken?

If I remember right I bought $200.00 worth at roughly $10.00 each... sooo 20 coins. All of them were taken.

Horn
14th November 2013, 08:35 PM
One has to ask oneself, is stealing a dishonest virtual pretend money Bitcoin really stealing?

Or does two wrongs make it right, in this case?

Ares
14th November 2013, 09:22 PM
One has to ask oneself, is stealing a dishonest virtual pretend money Bitcoin really stealing?

Or does two wrongs make it right, in this case?

Why don't you ask Jamie Dimon? I'm sure he's socked away a few billion in pretend virtual money provided by the Federal Reserve.

Ares
14th November 2013, 09:23 PM
If I remember right I bought $200.00 worth at roughly $10.00 each... sooo 20 coins. All of them were taken.

That sucks.. :( Sorry to hear that. Did Mt.Gox address it to you via an email?

I know blockchain had some thefts because of some flaws in their mobile wallet app for android and compensated the stolen Bitcoins to its users. But it was no where near on the scale that happened with Mt.Gox..

ximmy
14th November 2013, 09:28 PM
That sucks.. :( Sorry to hear that. Did Mt.Gox address it to you via an email?

I know blockchain had some thefts because of some flaws in their mobile wallet app for android and compensated the stolen Bitcoins to its users. But it was no where near on the scale that happened with Mt.Gox..

No, nobody said anything, I forgot about them for a few months then went to check and they were gone. nobody cared.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nVk25ZvTkU

Horn
14th November 2013, 09:36 PM
None of this would've happened if you had a the latest HAL 9000 portable device installed.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MMmYyIZlC4

China is shipping to accommodate your blockchain...!

ximmy
26th November 2013, 08:59 PM
Million-dollar robbery rocks Bitcoin exchange

Latest BTC security breach affects major European exchange, which shuts down personal wallet service


By Jon Gold (http://www.networkworld.com/Home/jgold.html), Network World
November 25, 2013 04:26 PM ET

Network World - Bitcoin Internet Payment Services, a Denmark-based exchange billing itself as Europe's biggest, was robbed of bitcoins worth more than $1 million in a theft that took place over the course of the past several days.
Bitcoins are a decentralized digital currency generated by computers “mining” for the solutions to complex math problems, and authenticated on a peer-to-peer basis – not by a central banking authority. It’s the third major heist this month – about $1.4 million worth was stolen several weeks ago from an anonymous Australian (http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2013/s3886606.htm) who ran an online wallet service known as Inputs.io, and a Chinese exchange abruptly vanished two weeks ago, taking more than $4 million with it. (http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/chinese-bitcoin-exchange-vanishes-along-bitcoins)
[MORE BITCOIN: Online gaming company settles complaint over secret bitcoin mining (http://www.networkworld.com/news/2013/112013-online-gaming-company-settles-complaint-276137.html)]
Smaller thefts, which affected consumer exchanges in the Czech Republic (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/bitcoins-stolen-after-czech-online-exchange-trading-the-digital-currency-was-hacked/2013/11/12/117fa380-4bbb-11e3-bf60-c1ca136ae14a_story.html) and Poland, have also taken place this month.
In the latest incident, BIPS was apparently targeted by a distributed denial-of-service attack earlier this month. A follow-up attack, according to bitcoin news site Coindesk (http://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-payment-processor-bips-attacked-1m-stolen/), subsequently knocked out key security systems and allowed the thieves to make off with 1,295 BTC.
In response to the incident, BIPS said in a statement that it was forced to pull the consumer payments functionality of its services off-line, and warned users that they would have to transfer any balances to a different wallet service.

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2013/112513-bitcoin-robbery-276352.html

Jewboo
26th November 2013, 09:10 PM
Bitcoin Internet Payment Services, a Denmark-based exchange billing itself as Europe's biggest, was robbed of bitcoins worth more than $1 million in a theft that took place over the course of the past several days...It’s the third major heist this month – about $1.4 million worth was stolen several weeks ago from an anonymous Australian (http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2013/s3886606.htm) who ran an online wallet service known as Inputs.io, and a Chinese exchange abruptly vanished two weeks ago, taking more than $4 million with it. (http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/chinese-bitcoin-exchange-vanishes-along-bitcoins)




http://i.imgur.com/himZD0M.gif

ximmy
4th December 2013, 01:58 PM
As Major Silk Road Competitor Shutters, $100M Vanishes With It



The stolen 5,400 BTC were allegedly just the tip of the iceberg. Redditors pointed to a transfer of 39,900 BTC this weekend, claiming it was an indication that the administrators were siphoning money from users' accounts on the site, as first reported by Forbes (http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2013/12/01/silk-road-competitor-shuts-down-and-another-plans-to-go-offline-after-6-million-theft/).

Another drug marketplace bit the dust over the weekend and another massive Bitcoin (http://mashable.com/category/bitcoin/) heist shook the deep web.
Sheep Marketplace, one of the two most prominent Silk Road (http://mashable.com/category/silk-road/) competitors, went down on Saturday. A message briefly posted on the site on Saturday claimed that one of Sheep Marketplace's vendors exploited a security flaw and stole 5,400 BTC ($6 million at its current value).
See also: Man Throws Away Trove of Bitcoin Worth $7.5 Million (http://mashable.com/2013/11/27/man-throws-away-millions-of-bitcoin/)

The heist could be even larger than that, though; it may have involved up to 96,000 BTC ($100 million), which would be by far the largest Bitcoin theft in U.S. dollars, given that Bitcoin's value is currently at an all-time high (http://mashable.com/2013/11/27/bitcoin-1000/). It's the third major Bitcoin robbery in the last month; cybercriminals also stole 4,100 BTC from inputs.io (http://mashable.com/2013/11/08/bitcoin-theft-tradefortress/) and 1,295 BTC from BIPS (http://mashable.com/2013/11/25/cyberattack-leads-to-heist-of-1-million-in-bitcoin/), both online Bitcoin payment providers.
On Saturday, Reddit user posted a message (http://www.reddit.com/r/SheepMarketplace/comments/1ru2kw/sheep_is_down_admin_blames_user_ebook101_for_scam/) from the site's administrators, which has since been removed. The message claimed vendor EBOOK101 hacked the site and stole 5,400 Bitcoin:
Sheep is down
We are sorry to say, but we were robbed on Saturday 11/21/2013 by vendor EBOOK101. This vendor found bug in system and stole 5400 BTC - your money, our provisions, all was stolen. We were trying to resolve this problem, but we were not successful. We are sorry for your problems and inconvenience, all of current BTC will be ditributed to users, who have filled correct BTC emergency adress [sic].
I would like to thank to all SheepMarketplace moderators by this, who were helping with this problem. I am very sorry for this situation. Thank you all.

Details of the incident are still unclear. Angry former users of the drug bazaar are pointing fingers in all directions, mainly on Reddit (http://mashable.com/category/reddit/), and mounting a cyber-manhunt operation to track down the robbers. Many believe the heist was a scam, and the No. 1 suspect among Redditors (http://www.reddit.com/r/SheepMarketplace/comments/1rpy1t/i_was_wrong_it_is_a_scam_proof_inside/) is the Sheep Marketplace administrator, a Czech citizen named Tomáš Jiřikovský. Rumors of suspicious behavior from Sheep Marketplace's administrators began in late November, as documented on the website SheepMarketScam.com (http://sheepmarketscam.com/).

http://mashable.com/2013/12/03/sheep-marketplace-shutdown-100-million-bitcoin/

Santa
4th December 2013, 03:16 PM
A message briefly posted on the site on Saturday claimed that one of Sheep Marketplace's vendors exploited a security flaw and stole 5,400 BTC ($6 million at its current value).

Sheep Sheep Marketplace? LOL... At least it can claim honest advertizing. Buying illegal drugs online from a Market called Sheep Sheep is like buying a retirement condo from a Co. called Soylent Green Villages.

Rubberchicken
4th December 2013, 03:35 PM
The Bitcult tards are gonna face the music one day, Sorry! Through theft, monitoring (and prosecution) or complete shutdown the future isn't anything like they think it's going to be. Do think the biggest crime syndicate is going to let some Geeks move in on their territory that easy? If so, you are fantasizing. If it's too good to be true it probably is. You might as well spend your frn's on unicorn farts.

mick silver
4th December 2013, 03:38 PM
dont say nothing bad about Sheep Sheep Marketplace thats were my mickcoins are going on sale at

EE_
4th December 2013, 03:50 PM
Nice going for guy/guys at sheep. Scam is part of this business.
If they can get away with 100 million, they did real good. No one to call to report the theft to and no recource.
The owner of the site owes no one anything. He's probably blowing rasberries at the losers right now.
You can't hardly trust a real business with a reputation and an address...why should you trust a perfect stranger in this wild west money grab?

Horn
4th December 2013, 05:21 PM
Nice going for guy/guys at sheep. Scam is part of this business.
If they can get away with 100 million, they did real good. No one to call to report the theft to and no recource.
The owner of the site owes no one anything. He's probably blowing rasberries at the losers right now.
You can't hardly trust a real business with a reputation and an address...why should you trust a perfect stranger in this wild west money grab?

Makes me wonder if they aren't just another arm of the cia gaining hit and run cash.

mick silver
4th December 2013, 06:21 PM
dont tell the ones buying coins ............... shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh i need my paper from my sales , so i can buy more silver then when they lose there asses i never mind ,,,,,,,,,,,,, told you so

monty
2nd July 2021, 11:29 AM
Whitney Webb airs her personal life problems with a former co-worker/boyfriend and the disappearance of $16,000.00 in crypto in what seems to have been an ongoing fiasco in their social networworking circles
3 hours
https://odysee.com/@TLAVagabond:5/Whitney-Webb-Interview-Stolen-Crypto-Lies-Divison-Setting-The-Record-Straight:3