
The CFTC has sued a North Carolina man and his company over an alleged commodity pool fraud tied to crypto and futures trading.
Summary
- CFTC says Argent Capital solicited $14.8 million while hiding losses from at least 60 investors.
- The complaint links Bitcoin, Ether, futures, options, false statements, registration failures, and alleged misused funds.
- The case lands as CFTC faces wider questions over crypto oversight, resources, and derivatives rules.
In a July 7 press release, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said it filed a civil enforcement action against Trevor Vernon and Argent Capital Management LLC. The agency said the pool traded equity index futures, options on equity index futures, Bitcoin, Ether, and other crypto assets.
The complaint says Vernon and Argent Capital solicited more than $14 million from at least 60 participants from March 2022 to February 2026. The CFTC said Vernon told investors he was a successful trader and claimed the pool had strong gains.
Agency says losses were hidden
The agency said those claims did not match the trading record. In its complaint, the agency said Vernon’s trading produced “consistent and catastrophic losses” for pool participants.
The regulator said Vernon and Argent Capital sent monthly emails and quarterly updates that showed rising account balances from gains that did not exist. The agency said the pool lost more than $8.6 million through trading, while investors received false reports about performance.
The agency also alleged that Vernon misused pool money. It said about $3 million went to payments to existing participants in a way “akin to a Ponzi scheme.” The complaint also says Vernon used about $136,000 for private air travel.
CFTC seeks bans and penalties
The lawsuit includes seven counts tied to fraud, registration failures, and false statements to the regulator. The agency said Argent Capital Management failed to register as required under federal commodities law.
The agency also said Vernon made false statements during sworn testimony in January while the agency investigated the matter. The regulator asked the court for restitution, disgorgement, civil penalties, and permanent trading and registration bans.
The CFTC’s complaint treats Bitcoin and Ether as commodities. That position fits the agency’s long-running effort to assert authority over parts of the crypto market, especially where crypto appears in derivatives, pooled trading, or fraud cases.
The court has not ruled on the claims. The CFTC’s filing starts a civil case, and Vernon and Argent Capital will have a chance to answer the complaint in federal court.
Case lands during wider CFTC debate
The action comes as the agency faces broader attention over crypto oversight. CME Group moved to sue the CFTC over the agency’s approval of U.S. crypto perpetual futures, arguing the products should be treated as swaps.
The agency is also under pressure from lawmakers over prediction markets. As crypto.news reported, Senators Adam Schiff and John Curtis asked the CFTC to review Polymarket advertising claims and questioned whether the regulator has enough authority and resources for consumer protection.
The Argent Capital case is different from those market-structure disputes. It centers on alleged investor fraud, false reporting, registration failures, and misuse of money. Still, it adds another crypto-linked matter to the CFTC’s docket at a time when the agency may receive broader power over digital commodities under proposed U.S. market rules.
As previously reported, crypto.news also covered the CFTC’s decision to scrap its no-deny settlement rule. That change gave defendants more room to dispute agency claims after settling enforcement cases.

