December 28, 2024

Breaking the bank — Ex-bank CEO gets 24 years after falling for crypto scam, causing bank collapse Former bank CEO ignored warnings that he was being scammed while tanking bank.

Ashley Belanger – Aug 22, 2024 8:05 pm UTC Enlargenadia_bormotova | iStock / Getty Images Plus reader comments 142

A federal judge sentenced a 53-year-old Kansas man to more than 24 years in prison after the former bank CEO abused his trusted position to embezzle $47 million after falling for a cryptocurrency scam that he believed would make him wildly rich.

In a press release, the US Attorney’s Office said that Shan Hanes was driven by “greed” when directing bank employees to transfer millions in funds to a sketchy crypto wallet managed by still-unknown third parties behind the so-called “pig butchering” scheme.

Hanes was first targeted by scammers in late 2022, apparently when he got a message from an unidentified co-conspirator on WhatsApp, prosecutors said. After blowing through his own funds seeking promised profits, Hanes stole tens of thousands from a local church, then a local investor club, and finally his daughter’s college fund, NBC News reported. Then when all those wells dried up, he started stealing bank fundsall in the false hopes that sending more and more money to the scammers would somehow “unlock the supposed returns” on his crypto investments.

In total, Hanes made 11 wire transfers using bank funds between May 2023 and July 2023. But instead of getting rich quick, Hanes never realized any profits at all, the US Attorney’s Office said.

He pleaded guilty to one count of embezzlement by a bank officer after he singlehandedly caused the collapse of Heartland Tri-State Bank (HTSB) in Elkhart, Kansas, the press release said.

Because the bank was insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the FDIC “absorbed the $47.1 million loss” after “Hanes fraudulent actions caused HTSB to fail and the bank investors to lose $9 million,” the US Attorney’s Office said. On top of those losses, Hanes’ fraudulent actions caused “catastrophic losses to bank customers who relied on the bank for the safekeeping of their savings,” the press release confirmed.

According to NBC News, Hanes missed at least one opportunity to realize that he was being scammed. After he asked for a $12 million loan from a neighbor, Brian Mitchell, his neighbor detected the scam and refused to lend the money.

“I said, ‘Youre in a scam, walk away,'” Mitchell told NBC News.

But Hanes didn’t walk away. Going the other direction, he directed bank employees to wire millions more to scammers after he got the warning from Mitchell. It wasn’t until Mitchell heard from a bank employee that Hanes had wired money out of the bank that Mitchell insisted on speaking to the bank’s board.

Days later, Hanes was fired, NBC News reported. But even then, Hanes never believed he was being scammed, reportedly telling Mitchell that he was still scheming to find a way to recover his make-believe profits right up to the moment he was arrested.

“He said … ‘If I just had another two months, I could get the money back,'” Mitchell told NBC News.

Law enforcement and government officials have warned that pig-butchering scams are growing increasingly common, urging people to “think twice” to avoid being victimized. Last year, the US Department of the Treasurys Financial Crimes Enforcement Network issued an alert, which explained in detail how the scams commonly work and laid out red flags to watch out for. Victims may never fully recover losses, DOJ says

A Kansas FBI agent, Stephen Cyrus, said in the press release that as CEO, Hanes violated “the trust and confidence of the community of Elkhart” by embezzling the funds.

Mitchell described Hanes’ deceptions and manipulations as “pure evil,” while Cyrus said that it was Hanes’ “job” and “the banks job” to “protect its customers and identify fraudulent scamsnot to participate in them.”

In a court filing at sentencing, Hanes’ lawyer, John Stang, chalked up his client’s misdeeds to “bad choices,” reminding the court that Hanes had been deceived, too, by “an extremely well-run cryptocurrency scam.”

“He was the pig that was butchered,” Stang wrote. “Mr. Haness vulnerability to the Pig Butcher scheme caused him to make some very bad decisions, for which he is truly sorry for causing damage to the bank and loss to the Stockholders.”

Hanes faced a maximum penalty of 30 years. While Judge John Broomes ordered him to serve less time than that, his sentence of more than 24 years is 29 months longer than prosecutors had requested, NBC News reported.

Right now, it’s unclear how or when victims will be repaid for losses. Broomes ordered “that restitution be finalized at a separate hearing within the next 90 days,” the US Attorney’s Office said.

In the community, people are still struggling to recover, Mitchell told NBC News, noting that some people lost up to 80 percent of their retirement savings. For at least one woman, retirement is impossible now, Mitchell said, and for another local woman, it has become difficult to pay for her 93-year-old mother’s nursing home.

US Attorney Kate E. Brubacher said that it’s hard to say when or if victims will be made whole again.

“Hanes is a liar and a master manipulator” who squandered away “tens of millions of dollars in cryptocurrency” while orchestrating “schemes to cover his tracks concerning the losses at the bank,” Brubacher said. “Many victims will never fully recoup losses to their life savings and retirement funds, but at least we at the Department of Justice can see that Hanes is held criminally responsible for his actions.” reader comments 142 Ashley Belanger Ashley is a senior policy reporter for Ars Technica, dedicated to tracking social impacts of emerging policies and new technologies. She is a Chicago-based journalist with 20 years of experience. Advertisement Channel Ars Technica ← Previous story Next story → Related Stories Today on Ars