The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission CFTC filed a lawsuit in federal court against Trevor Vernon, who lives in North Carolina, and his company Argent Capital Management. The institution claimed that Vernon operated a commodity pool that included crypto assets and collected $14.8 million by defrauding investors. In the file, it was stated that the structure includes stock index futures, options based on these contracts and crypto transactions.
Scope of the CFTC’s charges
The CFTC argued that Vernon raised money from at least 60 investors between March 2022 and February 2026, presenting himself as a successful investor and giving the impression of regular returns. According to the institution, actual transactions resulted in continuous and heavy losses for investors. CFTC noted that Bitcoin and Ether transactions are also included in this structure and that it considers these two assets as commodities. The CFTC serves as the primary regulatory agency overseeing derivatives markets and commodity-related transactions in the United States.
The CFTC alleged that Vernon made false statements and concealed losses in the pool in periodic account updates and monthly performance messages he sent to investors.
In the lawsuit, it was stated that crypto transactions and futures and option positions based on stock indices resulted in a total loss of over 8.6 million dollars. The institution claimed that these losses were not disclosed to investors, on the contrary, the performance was shown differently than it was.
Ponzi-like structure claim
The CFTC alleged that Vernon used approximately $3 million to pay off existing investors, a Ponzi-like method of hiding losses. Additionally, it was included in the case file that 136 thousand dollars was allocated for private air transportation. The institution argued that these expenses were for personal use other than investment purposes.
The regulator argued that some payments to investors were financed with new sources, obscuring true trading performance.
The CFTC also alleged that Argent Capital Management failed to register as required by federal commodities regulations. In addition, the institution argued that some of the statements Vernon made to the regulator in January did not reflect the truth. Within the scope of the case, seven separate accusations were made under the headings of fraud, failure to comply with registration obligations and making false statements.
Sanctions requested from the court
The CFTC asked the court to permanently bar Vernon from registering and transacting. The institution also demanded the return of ill-gotten gains, a fine and a decision to refund investors.
The file stood out as one of the CFTC’s rare crypto-related enforcement actions. While the debate continues in the USA to which institution and to what extent the digital asset market will be supervised, this case has once again made visible the CFTC’s claim of authority in the crypto field.


