Crime & Safety

'Website Wiz' From Queens Charged With Grand Larceny

Website consultant, Nithushan Sachchithanantham, 28, is accused of swiping about $233,000 in cryptocurrency from two tech entrepreneurs.

QUEENS, NYC — A Queens website consultant is accused of swiping a hefty some of money in cryptocurrency from two of his clients, according to Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz.

Nithushan Sachchithanantham, 28, has been charged with grand larceny for stealing the proceeds of an online sale of more than 3,000 non-fungible tokens, authorities said.

Prosecutors said Sachchithanantham set up an online sale of digital artwork for his two clients and then reportedly diverted nearly $233,000 in SOL cryptocurrency to his personal cryptocurrency wallets. This case is the first prosecution for the Cyber Crime Unit of the DA’s Major Economic Crimes Bureau.

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“Cryptocurrency, NFTs and blockchain may seem difficult to understand but the alleged wrongdoing in this case is simple: stealing money is a crime. The victims wanted to sell their digital artwork as non-fungible tokens with the defendant’s technical help," District Attorney Melinda Katz said. "Instead, this website wiz allegedly helped himself to the sellers’ $233,000 in cryptocurrency profits. My office created the Cyber Crime Unit to handle these unique cases that delve into the virtual world we live in today to ensure justice for all victims of crime.”

Sachchithanantham, of Hillside Avenue in Queens Village, was arraigned last Thursday before Queens Criminal Court Judge Denise Johnson on a two-count complaint. In addition to the grand larceny charge, he's also charged with unlawful possession of personal identification in the third degree.

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According to the charges, last month Sachchithanantham was hired as a software consultant. He was tasked with setting up an online sale for two men who wanted to sell uniquely-coded digital artwork, known as non-fungible tokens, on the Solana network.

Authorities said he was contracted to help develop more than 3,000 digital images of crocodiles collectively known as the Solana Swamp and prepare them for an online sale where the NFTs could be purchased using the cryptocurrency SOL.

Sachchithanantham set up an online wallet to receive the payments and was paid a consultant fee of $5,400 worth of cryptocurrency.

Continuing, the DA said, when the sale took place on Dec. 1, 2021, the artwork sold for about $233,000 worth of SOL cryptocurrency. The victims then noticed that the cryptocurrency funds, which are traceable through a public transaction ledger called blockchain were transferred from their own digital wallet into other digital wallets without their permission.

When the victims contacted the Sachchithanantham, he allegedly ignored their attempts to reach him and did not return their calls or respond to messages.

District Attorney Katz said investigators tracked the cryptocurrency transactions to digital wallets used by the defendant.

Sachchithanantham is due back in court on Feb. 8, 2022. If convicted, he faces up to 15 years in prison.

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