One year ago, Argentina’s President Javier Milei posted about a crypto token called LIBRA. Less than an hour later, it collapsed. Tens of thousands of people lost money. Some lost a few thousand dollars. Others lost six figures. A small group walked away with millions. was deleted. But the fallout didn’t disappear. Since then, LIBRA has sparked: • A federal criminal investigation in Argentina • A Congressional investigative commission • A class action lawsuit in the United States • Evidence of large financial transfers before launch • Questions about meetings, agreements, and who knew what In this documentary, we break down what actually happened. We look at the launch timeline. The 45-minute crash. The wallets that profited. The wallets that didn’t. We speak with Alfonso Gamboa Silvestre, who invested $10,000 that day and hasn’t returned to crypto since. We speak with attorney Agustín Rombolá, who is representing 112 investors in Argentina. And we speak with Congressman Maximiliano Ferraro, who says Congress has done its part, and now it’s up to the judiciary. One year later, the central questions remain: Was this political negligence? Was it coordination? Or was it something else entirely? Thousands of investors are still waiting for answers. This is the LIBRA case, one year later. Subscribe to BeInCrypto for investigative reporting on crypto, power, and global finance.
One Year Later: The Evidence Against Argentina’s Milei in the LIBRA Case
One year ago, Argentina’s President Javier Milei posted about a crypto token called LIBRA. Less than an hour later, it collapsed. Tens of thousands of people lost money. Some lost a few thousand dollars. Others lost six figures. A small group walked away with millions. was deleted. But the fallout didn’t disappear. Since then, LIBRA has sparked: • A federal criminal investigation in Argentina • A Congressional investigative commission • A class action lawsuit in the United States • Evidence of large financial transfers before launch • Questions about meetings, agreements, and who knew what In this documentary, we break down what actually happened. We look at the launch timeline. The 45-minute crash. The wallets that profited. The wallets that didn’t. We speak with Alfonso Gamboa Silvestre, who invested $10,000 that day and hasn’t returned to crypto since. We speak with attorney Agustín Rombolá, who is representing 112 investors in Argentina. And we speak with Congressman Maximiliano Ferraro, who says Congress has done its part, and now it’s up to the judiciary. One year later, the central questions remain: Was this political negligence? Was it coordination? Or was it something else entirely? Thousands of investors are still waiting for answers. This is the LIBRA case, one year later. Subscribe to BeInCrypto for investigative reporting on crypto, power, and global finance.






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