World’s most wanted woman now has a £4,000,000 bounty on her head

Dr Ruja Ignatova who started a digital revolution with OneCoin. She has now been placed on an FBI World's Most Wanted list.
Dr Ruja Ignatova scammed investers out of billions with fake cryptocurrency OneCoin (Picture: BLAGOI ANEV)

A missing cryptoqueen considered to be the ‘world’s most wanted woman’ now has a £4,000,000 bounty on her head.

Bulgarian-born Ruja Ignatova, who has German citizenship, is accused of running one of the biggest cryptocurrency scams of all time, defrauding investors out of $4bn (£3.3bn) by selling a fake cryptocoin called OneCoin in 2014.

The 43-year-old disappeared without a trace in 2017, and has been on the FBI’s Most Wanted List since 2022.

FBI officials previously offered a bounty of $100,000 for information on the woman believed to have masterminded ‘one of the largest global fraud schemes in history’, but have since upped the payout to $5,000,000.

A 'Ten Most Wanted Fugitive' poster made available by the FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) of Ruja Ignatova (issued 01 July 2022). The FBI announced on 30 June 2022, the addition of Ruja Ignatova, also known as 'Cryptoqueen', to its 'Ten Most Wanted Fugitives' list for her alleged leadership of a 'massive fraud scheme that affected millions of investors worldwide'. The FBI is offering a reward of up to 100,000 US dollar for information leading to her arrest. The 42-year-old woman was last seen in October 2017 when she traveled from Sofia, Bulgaria, to Athens, Greece. She served as top leader at OneCoin, a Bulgarian-based company, through October 2017. EPA/FBI HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES
The missing cryptoqueen has been on the FBI’s Most-Wanted Lisrt since 2022 (Picture: EPA)

‘Ignatova is believed to travel with armed guards and/or associates,’ reads her FBI most wanted poster. ‘Ignatova may have had plastic surgery or otherwise altered her appearance’.

The FBI believes she may be using a German passport to travel to countries such as the UAE, Russia, Greece and Eastern Europe.

But there is also speculation she may have been murdered by the Bulgarian mafia, who are suspected of masterminding the OneCoin scheme.

Ignatova was last seen boarding a Ryanair flight from Sofia to Athens on 25 October 2017, after fleeing a flat belonging to her American boyfriend upon learning he was cooperating with the FBI.

Dr Ruja Ignatova who started a digital revolution with OneCoin. She has now been placed on an FBI World's Most Wanted list.
The missing cryptoqueen was rumoured to have been killed by the Bulgarian mafia (Picture: Facebook)

In 2018, documents found in the possession of a murdered Bulgarian police official suggested Igantova may have been murdered onboard a mafia bosses private yacht who she was paying for protection.

The documents suggested Ignatova’s body was dismembered and dumped in the Ionian Sea, although the source was said to be heavily intoxicated when they made the claims, and the FBI is still searching under the assumption she is alive.

When she was first added to the most-wanted list, the FBI said she had escaped with a ‘tremendous amount of cash- enough to buy a lot of friends’.

BBC journalist Jamie Bartlett, whose podcast The Missing Cryptoqueen brought global attention to her story, believes the reward increase is aimed at people possibly still protecting her.

She has been missing since 2017 when US officials signed an arrest warrant and investigators began closing in on her (Picture: REX/Shutterstock)

‘The FBI are now refocusing their efforts on the people around Dr Ruja, trying to tempt her close associates to get in touch.

‘$100,000 wouldn’t persuade a junior member of a crime syndicate or a personal bodyguard to call the FBI’s hotline – it’s far too risky. But $5m just might.

‘We will probably know within a few weeks if it’s worked.’

While Ignatova remains at large, other members of the OneCoin scam have since been apprehended.

OneCoin’s co-founder Karl Sebastian Greenwood and former head of legal and compliance, Irina Dilkinska, both pleaded guilty to federal charges of wire fraud and money laundering in connection to the scam in December 2022.

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