MoonPay executives may have sent $250k to Nigerian scammer
10 comments
·July 13, 2025cmdtab
I find it interesting how Americans roll over open corruption now
sofixa
Indeed, it escalated quite quickly to somewhat under the table in the first term, but the second term hadn't already started and it was all out in the open. With some discontent (especially around the comic depicting it that got denied by the Washington Post, resulting in their cartoonist leaving to publish it), but nothing near the outrage there should be.
greatgib
I would say that it is well deserved. They tried to indirectly bribe a president for pushing their own interests. The money is probably better funding Nigerian families than going to Trump's team.
harvey9
"Nigerian families" is a very rose-tinted view of a scam operator.
mumbisChungo
They were also directly responsible for the bored ape NFT pump and dump in 2021.
dawatchusay
250k must be chump change compared to what they gained then
JKCalhoun
I was asking about the word "irony" and someone directed me to this post. Am I in the right place?
metalman
take the down voteing as an afirmative. I was just surprised to see that the Nigerean scam industry was adapting and thriving, as it seemed that they had lost there mojo to other countrys inspite of bieng very early inovators in the international telecom scam market. Or perhaps this is a younger crew, and the more experienced Nigerian scammers are working as consultants for NK, Thailand, etc.
sofixa
What was indirect about it? Donating to the inauguration fund was clearly and directly a bribe.
You can't say there's no Pay in MoonPay