BTC/USD $68,420 +2.8%
ETH/USD $3,540 +1.4%
SOL/USD $142.80 -0.6%
BNB/USD $605.20 +0.9%
XRP/USD $0.62 -1.2%
DOGE/USD $0.18 +5.4%
BTC/USD $68,420 +2.8%
ETH/USD $3,540 +1.4%
SOL/USD $142.80 -0.6%
BNB/USD $605.20 +0.9%
XRP/USD $0.62 -1.2%
DOGE/USD $0.18 +5.4%
Policy

DOJ Seeks to Dismiss $722M BitClub Fraud Case, Report

The U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly preparing to drop federal charges against Matthew Goettsche, the founder of BitClub Network, in a case that accused him of running a crypto mining

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 11, 2026
6 min read
NEWS
DOJ Seeks to Dismiss $722M BitClub Fraud Case, Report
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

The U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly preparing to drop federal charges against Matthew Goettsche, the founder of BitClub Network, in a case that accused him of running a crypto mining “passive income” scheme that allegedly defrauded investors of $722 million between 2014 and 2019.

According to a report from Bloomberg Law, the DOJ’s deputy attorney general’s office ordered the New Jersey attorney general’s office to dismiss the case “with prejudice.” Shortly afterward, a court filing in New Jersey indicated the parties have reached “an agreement in principle” to resolve the pending charges, though additional time is needed to finalize the terms.

Key takeaways

  • DOJ is reportedly seeking to dismiss charges against BitClub Network founder Matthew Goettsche after an “agreement in principle” outlined in a New Jersey court filing.
  • Bloomberg Law reported the decision follows direction from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche’s office to end a DOJ approach described as “regulation by prosecution.”
  • The original indictment dates to December 2019 and alleged wire fraud and unregistered securities offenses tied to BitClub’s investor “mining pool” pitch.
  • Several former BitClub associates—Silviu Balaci, Joseph Abel, and Gordon Beckstead—have already pleaded guilty, making the case outcome a notable shift in enforcement trajectory.
  • Investors and legal watchers will be looking for whether any dismissal is fully implemented and whether the broader DOJ pivot affects other ongoing crypto prosecutions.

A case built on a “mining pool” promise

Goettsche was indicted in December 2019 and, at the time, was scheduled to go to trial in October on charges including conspiracy to commit wire fraud and the sale of unregistered securities. Prosecutors alleged that BitClub operated from April 2014 to December 2019 as a Bitcoin mining pool where investors could purchase shares and earn passive returns.

In filings and allegations cited in coverage of the matter, BitClub’s model was said to rely on falsified earnings and fabricated mining data—claims that prosecutors and other court materials have treated as central to convincing investors to join and continue funding the scheme.

Earlier court submissions also reflected Goettsche’s description of the business as one built “on the backs of idiots,” according to court material referenced in previous reporting.

How the DOJ pivot appears to factor in

The reported change arrives against the backdrop of an April 2025 memo issued by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. As described in that memorandum, it directed DOJ to end what was characterized as “regulation by prosecution” in relation to the digital asset industry—an approach that some critics argued had been too broad and blurred the line between criminal enforcement and broader market regulation.

Bloomberg Law reported on Friday that the deputy attorney general’s office in Washington ordered the New Jersey attorney general’s office to dismiss the Goettsche case with prejudice. The same reporting cited two sources familiar with the matter.

In a subsequent filing, Goettsche’s attorneys told U.S. District Judge Claire Cecchi that the parties “reached an agreement in principle” to resolve the charges, but that they need time to finalize the terms—language consistent with a DOJ-led shift that is moving from policy direction toward case-level resolution.

The DOJ did not provide immediate comment when Cointelegraph reached out, according to the account in the source article.

Why this outcome stands out in U.S. crypto enforcement

If the dismissal proceeds, it would represent one of the more prominent reversals in U.S. crypto enforcement history—especially because the Goettsche matter has already produced guilty pleas from several alleged co-conspirators.

Three former BitClub Network figures—Silviu Balaci, Joseph Abel, and Gordon Beckstead—have pleaded guilty in connection with their involvement in the scheme, according to the details summarized in the source reporting. A dismissal of the lead founder’s charges, therefore, would not simply end a single prosecution; it could reshape how observers interpret the effect of DOJ’s policy changes on pending or future digital asset cases.

For market participants, this distinction matters. Many crypto investors follow enforcement not only to understand individual risk, but also to infer whether agencies are recalibrating what conduct they believe is best handled through prosecution versus through other regulatory or administrative channels.

At the same time, it is not yet clear what the final disposition will look like—dismissal “with prejudice” is reported as the direction, but the court filing emphasizes that the parties still need time to finalize terms. Readers should therefore treat the development as a process in motion rather than a final resolution until the court enters an order.

DOJ enforcement remains active elsewhere

The reported BitClub shift does not appear to represent an overall retreat from crypto crime cases. Other DOJ actions in recent months have continued to target fraud and theft.

In April, a California man, Evan Tageman, was sentenced to 70 months in prison for his alleged role in a criminal enterprise that stole about $263 million worth of crypto from victims through social engineering scams and burglary, according to the source article’s summary of earlier coverage.

The DOJ has also continued to freeze large pools of crypto tied to alleged investment scammers who targeted Americans, with the source article citing efforts that resulted in freezing more than $700 million in April. It further references a separate seizure of nearly $580 million in crypto connected to a criminal scam group operating in Southeast Asia earlier in the year.

Taken together, these actions suggest that while DOJ may be adjusting its strategic stance toward parts of the industry—particularly where it believes prosecution has functioned as a substitute for regulation—the department remains willing to pursue serious criminal conduct involving fraud and coercive tactics.

That tension—between a policy shift away from “regulation by prosecution” and continued case-by-case criminal enforcement—could become a key lens for the next wave of courtroom outcomes.

For now, investors and legal observers should watch for whether the New Jersey court formally dismisses the case as reported, what conditions—if any—are included in the final terms, and whether similar DOJ adjustments surface in other pending crypto prosecutions.

This article was originally published as DOJ Seeks to Dismiss $722M BitClub Fraud Case, Report on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.