The FBI says the Crypto-queen who scammed $4 billion is still alive

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 The FBI is offering a $100,000 reward for intel that ultimately leads to her arrest.

The FBI’s Most Wanted List, established in 1950, features only 529 fugitives who have earned an honorable mention, and only 11 of them are women. Ignatova is the 11th woman to make it onto the list.

She is suspected of having traveled on a German passport from Athens, possibly to the United Arab Emirates, Germany, Russia, Eastern Europe, or even back to Bulgaria. 

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Police warn that she has likely had plastic surgery to change her appearance.

OneCoin founder resurfaces in London

 She wasn’t seen until a recent listing of a property in the heart of London brought her out of hiding. Lawyers representing Ignatova made a formal claim on the property, listing her as the apartment’s “beneficial owner” in a filing with the UK’s financial regulator.

A change in the rules of Companies House forced Ignatova out of hiding, as she had to be named in full rather than just her shell company. It meant Ignatova was kept out of public records and land registry deeds… until now.