

A federal judge in Illinois sentenced Robert Dunlap to 23 years in prison on Tuesday for helping run the Meta-1 Coin fraud. Prosecutors said the scheme took $20 million from nearly 1,000 investors. Judge LaShonda Hunt also ordered Dunlap to repay the victims. The case centered on false claims that the token had backing in gold and fine art assets.
Dunlap served as a trustee of the project that marketed the so-called Meta-1 Coin. Prosecutors said he and others sold the token through the Meta-1 Coin Trust from 2018 to 2023. According to the case, Dunlap and his co-conspirators told investors that the token was backed by a $1 billion art collection. They also claimed it was backed by $44 billion in gold.
Authorities said those claims lacked credible proof. They said the project drew investors with promises of safety and enormous returns, including claims that buyers could earn returns up to 224,923%.
In November, a federal jury in the Northern District of Illinois convicted Dunlap on two counts of mail fraud. Each count carried a possible sentence of up to 20 years in federal prison. Prosecutors told the court that Dunlap kept lying as the years passed. In their sentencing memo, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jared Hasten and Paige Nutini said he showed no remorse.
The government said Dunlap also created the Meta Exchange website. There, he and others used automated trading bots to inflate both the token’s price and trading volume.
In March 2020, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission moved to stop the project. The SEC secured an asset freeze and emergency relief against Dunlap, Nicole Bowdler, and former Washington state Senator David Schmidt. The SEC said the group pitched Meta-1 Coin as a risk-free investment. Instead, the group never distributed the coins and spent investor money on personal costs and luxury cars, including a Ferrari.
After sentencing, IRS-CI Special Agent in Charge Adam Jobes said Dunlap stole more than money. He said the fraud stripped victims of savings, trust, and financial security, and left some with nothing.
The case arrives as regulators and law enforcement push harder against crypto fraud. In March, authorities charged a man accused of hacking the defunct DeFi platform Uranium Finance with computer fraud and money laundering.
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The Meta-1 case also showed a wider weakness in crypto markets. Tokens tied to gold, art, or other real-world assets can attract money through off-chain claims that retail investors cannot easily verify.
In this case, the project leaned on large numbers and prestige names, including Pablo Picasso and Vincent van Gogh. Yet prosecutors said no credible oversight, custody, or reporting supported those claims.
Robert Dunlap’s 23-year sentence closed a major Meta-1 Coin fraud case that misled nearly 1,000 investors and drained $20 million through false backing claims and manipulated trading activity. The case serves as a clear warning that crypto projects built on deception can bring severe legal consequences.