A former co-owner of the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings who defrauded another pro football league will spend more than six years behind bars for his role in a $700 million cryptocurrency scam.

Reggie Fowler was sentenced to 75 months in prison Monday in New York after admitting his guilt in April 2022 to five federal criminal charges, including wire and bank fraud and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business, prosecutors said.

As part of taking a plea deal, Fowler also admitted to defrauding those connected with the failed Alliance of American Football, known as the AAF, in 2018. The businessman from suburban Phoenix Arizona was an early investor in the doomed pro football league, which claimed to be an alternative to the NFL. The AAF shut down in April 2019 after only eight weeks of play.

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Fowler moved quickly, making millions on his crypto scam prosecutors allege

Prosecutors claim that Fowler, 64, evaded federal law by processing hundreds of millions of dollars of unregulated transactions on behalf of cryptocurrency exchanges as a shadow bank. He created Global Trading Solutions LLC, which worked with a company called Crypto Capital that allowed cryptocurrency exchanges to swap their digital currencies for cash, prosecutors allege.

Fowler was accused of opening dozens of accounts at bank locations across the U.S. and worldwide by falsely claiming the accounts were for real estate investment transactions when they were actually meant to handle quick scheme crypto transactions, prosecutors claimed. Fowler played “a critical role in a serious criminal enterprise” by lying to the banks that could have possibly faced regulatory action for supporting an unlicensed money services business, prosecutors added.

“In less than 10 months, Fowler processed approximately $750 million in cryptocurrency transactions in various currencies,” according to court filings. “At no point were Fowler, Global Trading Solutions, nor any of the Crypto Companies ever licensed as a money transmitting business in the United States, as required by federal law.”