The Celsius Criminal Cases Are Winding Down. Here Is What the Outcomes Tell Us
-

The sentencing of Roni Cohen-Pavon to time served, combined with Alex Mashinsky's 12-year prison sentence handed down in May 2025, brings the criminal accountability arc of Celsius's collapse to a close and offers a useful case study in how cooperation with federal prosecutors affects outcomes in crypto fraud cases. Mashinsky, as the founder and CEO who orchestrated the fraud at the highest level and pleaded guilty to commodities and securities fraud, received a 12-year sentence and $48 million forfeiture order — the harshest crypto fraud sentence issued in the current enforcement cycle. Cohen-Pavon, who cooperated extensively and provided assistance that prosecutors credited toward Mashinsky's conviction, received time served on charges of CEL token price manipulation and fraud, plus $1 million in forfeiture and a $40,000 fine. The contrast between the two outcomes illustrates a principle that defense attorneys in crypto cases have been emphasizing since the 2022 wave of collapses: early cooperation with federal investigators produces dramatically different sentencing outcomes than contested proceedings, even for defendants facing serious charges.
The broader significance of the Celsius resolution extends to how regulators and prosecutors will approach future crypto fraud cases. The indictments of both Mashinsky and Cohen-Pavon came approximately a year after the platform's collapse, and the full criminal process from arrest through final sentencing spanned nearly three years — a timeline that reflects the complexity of building fraud cases around crypto-native activities like token price manipulation and yield-bearing lending platforms. FTX, Celsius, BlockFi, and Voyager all collapsed within months of each other in 2022, and the criminal proceedings from that period are now largely concluded. The outcomes — Bankman-Fried sentenced to 25 years, Mashinsky to 12, Cohen-Pavon to time served — establish a sentencing range that will inform how future defendants and their attorneys assess the risk-reward calculation of cooperation versus litigation in crypto fraud prosecutions.