Imagine trusting a company that sounds like it’s plucked straight from a superhero comic-Fortress Trust-only to find out it’s more of a crumbling cardboard box. Nevada regulators swooped in like uninvited party crashers on October 22, waving a cease-and-desist order because, surprise-Fortress was drowning in a liquidity pool so shallow you needed a microscope to see the bottom. Their vault was about as “trustworthy” as a magician’s hat rabbit.
Turns out, Fortress, or should I say Elemental Financial Technologies-because nothing says “reliable” like a name change-was basically playing financial hide-and-seek with client assets. They didn’t just forget to balance their checkbooks; they forgot where they even put them. According to Bloomberg, they owe customers money they don’t have, and trying to withdraw your cash from Fortress right now? Think of it like asking a magician to pull a rabbit out of a hat, only to get an empty silk scarf instead.
The regulators called their practices “unsafe and unsound,” which is fancy bureaucrat speak for “You’re going to lose your shirt.” Over 250,000 users-including crypto and digital asset retirees-are now stuck in what can only be described as a “will they or won’t they” saga involving their savings. The order put Fortress on pause-no deposits, no withdrawals, no fancy promises-and warned that some regulator civil penalties could reach ten grand per misstep. This is starting to look less like a financial institution and more like a kid’s lemonade stand run by a squirrel with no claws.
Fortress has a history, folks. It launched in 2021 under Scott Purcell, the man who also founded Prime Trust-an institution that spectacularly collapsed in 2023, leaving investors with $80 million in hopes and dreams shattered like glass. You’d think someone would notice the pattern, but no-Fortress rebranded, kept ignoring red flags, and kept avoiding those pesky audited financial reports like they were unwanted pest control visits.
And if you think this is just a local circus, hold your horses. Fortress was cozying up with Ripple Labs and almost got swooped up for $15 million before Ripple, wisely, decided to back out after a security breach that turned their shiny new toys into digital trash. Now states like Connecticut and Maine are watching Fortress like a hawk on a mouse-gathering evidence, placing bets, and probably dreaming of the day they can write a big, fat fine.
All in all, Nevada’s move isn’t just about Fortress-it’s a siren call to the fragile crypto custodians still walking the tightrope. The warning bell is ringing louder than a cash register at a thrift store. Buckle up, or maybe just hide your assets under the mattress; whichever seems safer right now.
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2025-10-24 11:27