eFishery Founder Sentenced to 9 Years for $300M Fraud

CryptoFrontier

Indonesia’s Bandung District Court sentenced eFishery founder Gibran Huzaifah to 9 years in prison on charges of embezzlement and money laundering tied to a US$300 million accounting scandal, according to Bloomberg. The court also imposed a fine of 1 billion rupiah (approximately US$58,000) and granted Huzaifah seven days to appeal. The ruling came roughly one year after Huzaifah admitted to falsifying accounts at the Indonesian aquaculture startup.

Court Ruling and Sentencing

The Bandung District Court found Huzaifah guilty of embezzlement and money laundering following an investigation into eFishery’s collapsed operations. Prosecutors had sought a 10-year term and stated that the case caused more than 69 billion rupiah (approximately US$4 million) in losses while damaging investor confidence in the sector.

Fraud Discovery and Company Collapse

eFishery collapsed after a board probe revealed the company had allegedly overstated revenue and profit for years. The misconduct began in late 2018 during a period of cash shortage and was used to attract investor funding, according to statements attributed to Huzaifah.

Mechanics of the Fraud

Investigators uncovered a sophisticated scheme involving parallel accounting records and multiple shell companies—legal entities created primarily to move money or hide transactions rather than operate as genuine businesses. A significant gap was discovered between eFishery’s claims regarding automated feeder usage and actual estimates of how many devices were deployed and actively sending data. Internal reporting at eFishery allegedly inflated business performance across a broad scale.

Investor Impact and Regulatory Response

SoftBank Group and Temasek Holdings held preferred shares in eFishery and faced recovering only a small portion of their investments. The case prompted a broader reassessment of startup risk assessment in Southeast Asia, with Asian venture capital firms implementing tougher due diligence procedures and seeking stronger contractual protections. The fallout also hurt confidence in Indonesia’s technology sector more broadly.

Indonesia’s financial regulator is drafting new rules that would require audits for startups raising more than 100 billion rupiah (approximately US$6 million). Industry observers have noted that the case illustrates the “ESG Halo Effect”—the tendency for environmental, social, and governance mission statements to make investors less likely to scrutinize warning signs in a company’s business operations.

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