TLDR
- CFTC filed a complaint against Trevor Vernon and Argent Capital Management.
- The agency said the pool raised over $14M from at least 60 participants.
- The pool allegedly traded futures, options and crypto assets.
- CFTC said Vernon lost at least $8.6M trading participant funds.
- The complaint alleges false performance updates and Ponzi-like payments.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a complaint against Trevor L. Vernon and Argent Capital Management LLC, alleging they ran a fraudulent commodity pool that raised more than $14 million from at least 60 participants.
The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, said the pool traded equity index futures, options on equity index futures, crypto assets, and other purported investments. The CFTC said the alleged scheme operated from at least March 2022 through February 2026.
The agency is seeking restitution, disgorgement, civil monetary penalties, trading and registration bans, and a permanent injunction against Vernon and Argent Capital Management.
CFTC Alleges False Claims to Investors
The CFTC said Vernon and Argent Capital Management solicited investors by presenting Vernon as a successful trader. The complaint alleged the defendants told participants the commodity pool was highly profitable.
The agency said those claims were false. The CFTC stated, “In reality, his trading of participants’ funds resulted in consistent and catastrophic losses.”
The complaint alleged Vernon lost at least $8.6 million while trading futures, options, and crypto assets with participant funds. The CFTC said the losses were hidden from investors through false performance reports.
Those reports allegedly included monthly emails and quarterly updates showing rising account balances and gains that did not exist. The CFTC said the communications helped keep participants invested and concealed the pool’s actual condition.
Agency Says Pool Funds Were Misused
The CFTC alleged the defendants misappropriated participant funds while the pool was losing money. The complaint said funds from new participants were used to make payments to existing participants.
The agency described that activity as a Ponzi-like scheme meant to hide losses and conceal fraud. The complaint did not claim the payments came from real trading profits.
The alleged misuse of funds formed a key part of the case because investors were told the pool was profitable. The CFTC said the defendants continued raising money while losses increased.
The complaint also said the defendants failed to provide accurate information about the pool’s trading results. Those alleged false updates were central to the CFTC’s claim that investors were misled.
Registration and Testimony Claims Added
The CFTC also alleged Vernon and Argent Capital Management violated registration rules under the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations. The agency said the defendants were not properly registered for the activities described in the complaint.
The filing also accused Vernon of making false statements during sworn testimony in the CFTC investigation. The agency said the statements were made knowingly.
The registration claims add another layer to the fraud case because commodity pool operators and related market participants must meet CFTC requirements. The complaint seeks court orders that would bar Vernon and Argent from trading and registration activity.
The allegations remain claims in a civil enforcement case. Vernon and Argent Capital Management will have the chance to respond in court.
CFTC Seeks Restitution and Penalties
The CFTC asked the court to order restitution for affected participants and disgorgement of allegedly ill-gotten gains. The agency also requested civil monetary penalties.
A permanent injunction would block future violations of the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC rules. Trading and registration bans would also prevent the defendants from operating in regulated commodity markets.
The case adds to the CFTC’s enforcement actions involving crypto assets and pooled investment products. The agency has continued to bring cases where crypto trading is tied to futures, options, or commodity pool activity.







