Former cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon, co-founder of Terraform Labs and creator of the digital currencies TerraUSD and Luna, was sentenced on Thursday to 15 years in prison in a federal court in New York after admitting guilt in a massive fraud case that shook the global crypto market. Judge Paul A. Engelmayer described the scheme as one of “epic and generational scale” due to the enormous impact on thousands of investors.
The sentence was handed down after Kwon acknowledged misleading investors about the stability and safety of the TerraUSD ecosystem and its sister token, Luna. The collapse of these assets in 2022 resulted in losses of approximately $40 billion, affecting small savers, major investment funds, and triggering a chain reaction across global cryptocurrency markets.

During the trial, victims told the judge how they lost their savings, life plans, and even family stability after the crash of these digital assets. Kwon, 34, apologized to those affected, admitting that “what I did was wrong.” He also agreed to forfeit more than $19 million as part of his plea agreement.
Why is this sentence considered historic in the crypto world?
Because it not only represents one of the harshest penalties ever imposed for cryptocurrency-related fraud, but also surpasses the combined losses of other major financial scandals such as FTX and OneCoin, marking a turning point in how courts handle massive digital asset fraud cases.