India’s Central Bureau of Investigation has arrested Ayush Varshney, co-founder and CTO of Darwin Labs, for his alleged role in the GainBitcoin Ponzi scheme. The full scope of what he allegedly helped build is staggering.
According to the CBI announcement, Darwin Labs developed and deployed the fraudulent tech infrastructure behind the scheme: including the MCAP crypto token, ERC-20 smart contracts, the GBMiners.com mining platform, a Bitcoin payment gateway, a wallet product, and the GainBitcoin investor site itself. The scheme, reportedly launched in 2015, misappropriated roughly ₹19 crore ($2.1 million) and involved 29,000 mined bitcoins worth over $2 billion at today’s prices.
Varshney was intercepted at Mumbai airport by immigration authorities while allegedly attempting to flee India, then formally handed to the CBI on March 10.
The scheme’s mastermind, Amit K. Bhardwaj, was arrested back in 2018, meaning this investigation has been grinding forward for nearly a decade.
#CBI arrests co-founder and CTO of Darwin Labs Private Limited in connection with the GainBitcoin cryptocurrency fraud case. pic.twitter.com/fmvj1qk1YX
— All India Radio News (@airnewsalerts) March 11, 2026
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What the GainBitcoin Case Teaches Every Crypto Investor
What made the GainBitcoin Ponzi scheme so successful for so long? The arrest of GainBitcoin is not merely a legal matter but a case study in the operation of cryptocurrency fraud. The scheme did not promise extraordinary returns but rather a suite of infrastructure: a mining platform, a wallet, a payment gateway, and a token. This veneer of technical legitimacy enabled 29,000 mined bitcoins to circulate through a fraudulent system for several years.
Nation-state-level scam operations use the same playbook today: sophisticated fronts designed to look indistinguishable from legitimate projects.
How does an investor tell the difference? Due diligence on the team is non-negotiable. Varshney’s Darwin Labs had real technical credentials and allegedly used them to build fraudulent rails. Law enforcement is increasingly clawing back stolen crypto funds, but recovery after the fact is never guaranteed. The GainBitcoin victims learned that painfully. Promises of “high returns on crypto investments” remain one of the most reliable red flags in the space.
Even sophisticated actors with insider knowledge make catastrophic decisions when greed overrides judgment. Verify teams. Verify audits. Verify that a product actually exists before capital moves.
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Scammers Are Getting Arreste,d But Bitcoin Needs To Hold Here

While arresting scammers and halting large Ponzi schemes are certainly important, for Bitcoin to experience a surge, it appears more catalysts are required. For Arthur Hayes, this isn’t the time to buy Bitcoin, “not even $1“. However, Bitcoin’s current setup is genuinely intriguing. The price sits at $70,174: +0.9% on the day but down over 4% in the last 7 days.
Technically, Bitcoin is consolidating in a rectangular pattern on the 4-hour chart near its 50 and 200-EMAs. RSI sits at a neutral 44, suggesting the move isn’t overheated yet. The $71,600 level has rejected price three times: a break above it could liquidate an estimated $125 million in short positions and push toward the $73,800–$75,800 range.
For now, the $69,000 support appears to be holding. But three rejections at $71,600 demand respect.
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The post India Arrests Suspect in Alleged GainBitcoin Ponzi Scheme appeared first on 99Bitcoins.