FinTelegram releases v2.0 of its SoftSwiss / Dream Finance Compliance Report, adding a major new structural update: the Polish Coinspaid Dev engineering layer. Public company-data sources list Ivan Montik as a beneficial-owner entry of the new Coinspaid Dev entity, while Bitcapital Ltd, PrimeFuture Ltd and WRU Investments Ltd appear as shareholders.
The CoinsPaid ecosystem has quietly introduced a new structural element: Coinspaid Dev, stylized as {coinspaid.dev}, is now presented as a dedicated and independent blockchain infrastructure engineering brand. On the surface, this looks like a straightforward technology-branding move: the engineering team behind CoinsPaid steps into the spotlight, presents itself as a center of competence for blockchain infrastructure, and highlights more than a decade of production experience.
Editorial Note: This report distinguishes between documented facts, public self-positioning, third-party allegations, whistleblower claims and FinTelegram’s compliance-risk assessment. Allegations...
A whistleblower dossier claims that FINTEQHUB is operated via Dream Transaction Lda (Portugal) and sits inside the same ownership orbit as the CoinsPaid/CryptoProcessing cluster. We validated core elements: Dream Transaction’s shareholder register includes the same holding vehicles and individuals repeatedly appearing in em; FINTEQHUB, meanwhile, markets itself as “headquartered” in Lithuania.
A 2019 €50 million deal over the BeFree/Softswiss gambling empire has spiralled into a cross-border legal war: liquidation proceedings in the BVI, a massive defamation and hacking lawsuit in Tel Aviv, and now a corporate arbitration in Vienna. FinTelegram explains the dispute that pits Softswiss founders against their Israeli–BVI investors.
The Russian entrepreneurs Roland Isaev and Paata Gamgoneishvili have secretly emerged as major players in the online gambling and crypto payment processing sectors, with their influence extending through complex business structures in various jurisdictions. FinTelegram's ongoing investigations reveal their involvement with key entities, such as the SoftSwiss and Merkeleon groups, which they appear to control through ownership stakes and strategic acquisitions.