Share this article
BTC
$93,721.70
+
0.22%ETH
$1,767.32
-
1.52%USDT
$1.0003
+
0.01%XRP
$2.1980
-
0.83%BNB
$602.61
-
0.36%SOL
$152.66
+
1.65%USDC
$0.9999
+
0.01%DOGE
$0.1812
+
2.62%ADA
$0.7163
+
3.23%TRX
$0.2435
-
0.81%SUI
$3.3747
+
11.76%LINK
$14.95
+
0.08%AVAX
$22.26
-
0.13%XLM
$0.2801
+
5.62%LEO
$9.2050
+
0.83%SHIB
$0.0₄1392
+
3.57%TON
$3.2051
+
1.32%HBAR
$0.1871
+
4.39%BCH
$355.25
-
1.49%LTC
$84.04
+
0.24%Sign Up
- Back to menuPrices
- Back to menuResearch
- Back to menuConsensus
- Back to menu
- Back to menu
- Back to menu
- Back to menuWebinars & Events
Veritaseum Accuses T-Mobile of Gross Negligence Over $8.6M SIM-Swap Hack
Veritaseum alleges T-Mobile authorized no less than five SIM swaps, one of which brought the loss of $8.6 million in crypto.

Veritaseum is suing the U.S.' third-largest phone carrier for failing to prevent a hack that led to the loss of millions of dollars-worth of cryptocurrency.
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters
- The New York-based crypto project and its CEO, Reggie Middleton, filed a complaint Tuesday against T-Mobile accusing the company of "gross negligence" and failing to protect its customers.
- Founded in 2014, Veritaseum is a peer-to-peer market platform that allows users to directly trade with one another.
- The project hosted an initial coin offering (ICO) for its VERI token in April 2017.
- It alerted investors that July that hackers had stolen 36,000 tokens (then around $8.6 million) who promptly dumped it all on an exchange.
- Per Tuesday's filing, Veritaseum says hackers gained control of the phone belonging to Middleton in a SIM-swap attack – where a victim's phone number is transferred to another device.
- Not only did attackers then have access to confidential information, such as passwords, they could also bypass two-factor authentication and drain Middleton of all of his cryptocurrency.
- In the complaint, Veritaseum and Middleton say T-Mobile confirmed up to five unauthorized SIM swaps, including some months after being first alerted to the attack.
- Veritaseum alleges that T-Mobile's "gross negligence" led to the hack and severely damaged Middleton's mental health.
- It is accusing the phone carrier on one count of failing to protect its customer, one count of causing mental distress and on three counts of negligence.
- Veritaseum and Middleton are calling for a jury trial and is suing for damages.
- In 2019, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) accused Middleton, a former Huffington Post writer, of failing to register Veritaseum's ICO and spreading false information to investors.
- The case was subsequently settled for $9.5 million last November.
See also:Crypto Exec’s $1.8M SIM-Swap Lawsuit Has ‘Critical Holes,’ Says AT&T
See the full document below:
Paddy Baker
Paddy Baker is a London-based cryptocurrency reporter. He was previously senior journalist at Crypto Briefing. Paddy holds positions in BTC and ETH, as well as smaller amounts of LTC, ZIL, NEO, BNB and BSV.
