Audio By Carbonatix
A Turkish cryptocurrency boss and his two siblings have been jailed for 11,196 years each for defrauding investors of millions of dollars.
Faruk Fatih Ozer, 29, fled to Albania in 2021 with investor assets after his Thodex exchange suddenly collapsed.
He was extradited back to Turkey in June and found guilty of money laundering, fraud and organised crime.
Ozer told the court he would "not have acted so amateurishly" if his intent was criminal, state media reported.
"I am smart enough to lead any institution on Earth," the Anadolu agency quoted him as saying.
"That is evident in this company I established at the age of 22."
The brief trial in Istanbul also found his sister Serap and brother Guven guilty of the same charges.
Such extraordinary prison sentences are common in Turkey since the abolition of the death penalty in 2004 to aid efforts to join the European Union.
Adnan Oktar, a TV cult preacher, was jailed for 8,658 years in 2022 for fraud and sex crimes. Ten of his followers received the same sentence.

Prosecutors had asked for Ozer to be sentenced to 40,562 years in prison, AFP reported.
Turks began using cryptocurrencies as a defence against a deep slide in the value of the lira that began more than two years ago.
Thodex, founded in 2017, was one of the country's largest exchanges for virtual currencies.
Ozer gained national fame as a financial whizz and ingratiated his way into the establishment by befriending prominent pro-government figures.
However, the platform suddenly imploded in April 2021. Investor assets disappeared and Ozer went into hiding.
He was arrested last year in Albania on an international warrant from Interpol and extradited after a lengthy legal process.
Turkish media previously reported that Ozer had fled with assets worth $2bn (£1.6bn).
The prosecutor's indictment, however, estimates total losses to Thodex investors at 356 million liras.
That amount was worth about $43m at the time of the exchange's implosion.
The same amount is now worth about $13m because of rampant inflation and the lira's collapse on the international markets.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s public sector pay exceeds ECOWAS threshold – Finance Minister
2 hours -
Man City suffer Champions League exit to Real Madrid
3 hours -
Chelsea blown away by PSG to exit Champions League
3 hours -
Thiago and Rayan receive first Brazil call-ups
3 hours -
VAR error cost Brighton penalty against Arsenal
3 hours -
FIFA appears to rule out moving Iran’s matches to Mexico
3 hours -
CAF declare Morocco AFCON 2025 winners with final results overturned
3 hours -
Sporting Lisbon’s superb comeback ends Bodo/Glimt’s run
4 hours -
Ali Larijani, Iran’s ultimate backroom powerbroker, dies at 67
4 hours -
Gov’t urges reforms in education sector to boost competitiveness
4 hours -
No full renegotiation of conditions of service across public sector in 2026 – Mahama to Organised Labour
4 hours -
Osabarimba Kwesi Atta II to grace Gomoa Easter Carnival
4 hours -
High public sector wage bill leaves Ghana with little room to hire new workers
5 hours -
Employees compensation the largest share of gov’t expenditure – Finance Minister
5 hours -
Early indications show Israel tank fire hit UN Lebanon base injuring Ghanaian peacekeepers, source says
5 hours
