Faruk Fatih Ozer, once hailed as Turkey’s youngest crypto success story, was found dead this week in his single-cell cell at the high-security Type F prison in Tekirdağ, where he was serving an 11,196-year prison sentence for one of the biggest financial scandals in the country’s history.
Turkish Justice Minister Yılmaz Tunç confirmed that initial findings point to suicide, although a thorough investigation has been opened.
Ozer’s trajectory reflects the arc of crypto’s early Wild West: rapid innovation, uncontrolled growth, and catastrophic implosion.
How did Faruk Fatih Ozer end up serving 11,196 years in prison in Türkiye?
In 2017, at just 22 years old, he founded Thodex, a cryptocurrency exchange positioned as Turkey’s gateway to global digital assets at a time when the collapse of the Turkish lira was pushing savers toward Bitcoin.
In four years, Thodex claimed more than 400,000 users and processed hundreds of millions of dollars in daily volume, propelled by aggressive marketing, celebrity support and an aura of legitimacy built through Ozer’s public ties to pro-government circles.
That image disintegrated overnight in April 2021, when Thodex abruptly halted withdrawals and its website went dark.
Users soon realized that around $2.6 billion in deposits were missing. Chainalysis later identified it as one of the biggest exchange exit scams of the decade.
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A young man on the run in Albania: Do Kwon Jr?
Days later, Ozer fled Turkey and flew to Albania as prosecutors issued an Interpol Red Notice. The young entrepreneur, once depicted alongside Istanbul’s business elite, has become the face of a national betrayal.
For 16 months, he evaded capture before being arrested in August 2022 in Vlorë, Albania, after a lengthy manhunt coordinated by Interpol and Turkish intelligence services.
He was extradited to Istanbul the following year to stand trial on charges of aggravated fraud, money laundering and leading a criminal organization.
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Ozer’s Denial Lasts 11,196 Years in Tekirdağ Prison
In September 2023, Ozer, his brother Güven and his sister Serap were found guilty by an Istanbul court and sentenced to terms of 11,196 years each, a figure derived from separate charges covering 2,027 victims, a convention in Turkey since the abolition of capital punishment.
During his trial, Ozer denied any intent to defraud, presenting himself as a visionary undone by regulatory ambiguity.
“If I had had criminal intent, I would not have acted in such an amateurish manner,” he told the court, saying he planned to reimburse customers after stabilizing Thodex’s overseas operations.
In earlier statements written after his flight, he admitted to contemplating suicide, but said he chose to “stay alive and fight, work and pay off my debts.”

(Source – A rare image from Tekirağ Prison)
Tekirdağ Prison, where he spent his final months, has long been criticized by rights groups for its solitary confinement practices.
The prison itself is a “Type F” prison, described in a report by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture.
“The three F-type prisons visited in December 2005 housed a small number of prisoners serving aggravated life sentences. Their only activity outside their cells, apart from a fortnightly visit and a fortnightly telephone call, was outdoor exercise in the courtyard adjoining their cell.”
Local media reported that Ozer was found hanging in the toilet of his cell on Saturday morning. Medical teams pronounced him dead on site.
For many Turks, Ozer’s death closes a dark chapter in the country’s crypto boom, a story of youthful ambition consumed by hubris, regulatory neglect and national economic despair.
But his disappearance also underscores a broader reality: In an age where financial innovation outpaces surveillance, the line between entrepreneur and outlaw can disappear as quickly as a server goes offline.
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The post Who is Faruk Fatih Ozer? The post The Rise and Death of a $2.6 Billion Turkish Crypto Prodigy appeared first on 99Bitcoins.


