Thursday, 16 October 2014

Moolah CEO Alex Green Alleged To Be Online Scammer Ryan Humble - From The CoinFront

Two prominent members of the Dogecoin community have come out with evidence they believe ties Moolah CEO Alex Green to a history of fraudulent activity.


Jackson Palmer, the co-founder of Dogecoin, along with Ben Doernberg, a long time member of the Dogecoin community, have released a document where they’ve compiled their evidence of the “abuse, fraud, and destruction he leaves in his wake”.


Who Is Ryan Kennedy?


They allege that Alex Green is in fact the well-known online scam artist Ryan Kennedy, who also goes by the pseudonyms Ryan Humble, Ryan Gentle, Ryan Fletcher, Ryan Albright, and possibly others.


However, before they even start into the evidence, they go out of their way to mention the people who worked with Green “were not aware of who they were dealing with”, and that employees of Moolah, MintPal, and members of the Dogecoin & Syscoin communities in general were not part of Green’s alleged fraudulent activities.


The Evidence


The document starts with a simple email from an unknown source which read “Alex Green = Ryan Kennedy/Ryan Gentle”.


It then provides links to sources which cite Ryan Gentle’s fraudulent activities as a member of the Bitcoin Talk forum under the name “Lemon”, as well as a blog called “Stop Ryan” which dates as far back as 2006.


The document also provides several images of Ryan Humble, and of Alex Green’s face from a Skype conversation. Take a look at them below to see for yourself.


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An image of Ryan Humble from an earlier time


"Ryantehninja"

“Ryantehninja”


An image of Alex Green from a conversation on Skype

An image of Alex Green from a conversation on Skype


They also link Ryan Humble to another cryptocurrency project for which he raised funds and then failed to follow through on, Crypto.pm. The site’s design and investment offering “are essentially identical to the Moolah PIE investment offering”. Ryan Humble then claimed health issues before disappearing with over 500 BTC.


But what they called their “final nail in the coffin in determining that who we know as ‘Alex Green’ is not who they say they are” is when they acquired Ryan Gentle’s drivers licence.


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Alex Green Defends Himself


Alex Green has made a posting on Moolah’s blog defending his and his company’s name.


Calling his identity “irrelevant”, he claims that neither he nor his employees have broken any laws, and that “in the eyes of the law, my name is Alex Green.”


He also claims not to have disappeared with the money raised during Moolah’s investment period, instead having used those funds to run Moolah, which he claims takes $63,500 to operate.


Interestingly, Green has decided to step down as CEO of Moolah, “in order to ensure the company has management better able to cope with the issues now surrounding the company, and so that any reputation tarnished by association with me is no more.”He asserts that Moolah will continue, regardless of how its future unfolds.


And is Alex Green a scammer? He flat out denies that claim. “There is no scam here, no matter how you look. There has been poor management however and that is my fault.”


Jackson Palmer And Alex Green


This isn’t the first time Green and Palmer have come to odds.


When UltraPRO first announced their intention to trademark the Doge meme, Palmer and Green had a very public argument which ended up with Palmer leaving the Dogecoin community for a time. Palmer believed Green was attempting to gain control of Dogecoin and any related materials.


At the time, Palmer seemed to be overreacting. However, if his allegations against Green are accurate, his actions may be vindicated.


Do you trust Alex Green? Do you think the evidence against him is legitimate?



Moolah CEO Alex Green Alleged To Be Online Scammer Ryan Humble

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