Texas man gets 23 years for a $20 million crypto scam that used false claims about gold and famous artwork. Federal prosecutors said Robert Dunlap sold Meta-1 Coin through a trust and told investors it was backed by large assets that did not exist. The case drew attention because he linked the token to works he said included pieces by Pablo Picasso, Vincent Van Gogh, and Salvador Dalí.
Robert Dunlap, 55, of Houston, ran the scheme from 2018 to 2023, according to prosecutors. He told investors that Meta-1 Coin was a safe digital asset. He also claimed it was backed by as much as $44 billion in gold and about $1 billion in art.

Prosecutors said those claims were false, and the assets were not there. They said Dunlap also claimed an accounting firm had checked the gold and confirmed its value. Court records showed those statements were untrue.
He also used fake legal papers to hide that he did not own the gold or artwork. Prosecutors said the claimed art collection included works by Picasso, Van Gogh, Dalí, and other artists. Those claims helped him win trust from investors.
The government said nearly 1,000 people invested in the project. Many of them lost all of their savings. The losses topped $20 million, according to prosecutors.
A federal jury in the Northern District of Illinois convicted Dunlap on mail fraud charges last year. This week, U.S. District Judge LaShonda A. Hunt sentenced him to 23 years in federal prison. The court also ordered him to pay restitution to victims.
The sentence was announced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago. The FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation also worked on the case. The SEC and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia gave support.
In the government’s sentencing filing, prosecutors said Dunlap kept lying for years. They wrote that his statements grew larger over time. They also said he showed no real remorse.
IRS Criminal Investigation official Adam Jobes said, “Robert Dunlap didn’t just take money—he took years of hard work, trust, and financial security from his victims.” He added, “He used lies and deception to pull in millions, leaving some investors with nothing.”
The case stands out because the fraud mixed crypto language with claims about rare assets. Prosecutors said Dunlap sold the project as a secure investment. That message appeared to persuade people who believed the token had real backing.
Officials said the damage went beyond financial loss. Jobes said, “Crimes like this don’t just hit bank accounts—they upend lives.” He also said the prison term should warn others who plan similar crimes.
The sentence closes one part of the case, but restitution remains important for victims. The court order requires payment to those harmed by the fraud. It is not clear how much money victims will recover.
The case also adds to a wider list of crypto fraud prosecutions in the United States. In this matter, prosecutors focused on one clear point. They said the promised gold and artwork behind Meta-1 Coin never existed.
The post Texas Man Gets 23 Years for $20 Million Crypto Scam Tied To Fake Art Backing appeared first on CoinCentral.


