Futuros
Aceda a centenas de contratos perpétuos
TradFi
Ouro
Plataforma de ativos tradicionais globais
Opções
Hot
Negoceie Opções Vanilla ao estilo europeu
Conta Unificada
Maximize a eficiência do seu capital
Negociação de demonstração
Introdução à negociação de futuros
Prepare-se para a sua negociação de futuros
Eventos de futuros
Participe em eventos para recompensas
Negociação de demonstração
Utilize fundos virtuais para experimentar uma negociação sem riscos
Lançamento
CandyDrop
Recolher doces para ganhar airdrops
Launchpool
Faça staking rapidamente, ganhe potenciais novos tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Detenha GT e obtenha airdrops maciços de graça
Launchpad
Chegue cedo ao próximo grande projeto de tokens
Pontos Alpha
Negoceie ativos on-chain para airdrops
Pontos de futuros
Ganhe pontos de futuros e receba recompensas de airdrop
Investimento
Simple Earn
Ganhe juros com tokens inativos
Investimento automático
Invista automaticamente de forma regular.
Investimento Duplo
Aproveite a volatilidade do mercado
Soft Staking
Ganhe recompensas com staking flexível
Empréstimo de criptomoedas
0 Fees
Dê em garantia uma criptomoeda para pedir outra emprestada
Centro de empréstimos
Centro de empréstimos integrado
Indian Court Grants Bail to CoinDCX Co‑Founders in Fake Platform Cheating Case - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
A magistrate court in Thane, India, granted bail to the co-founders of CoinDCX, Sumit Surendra Gupta and Niraj Ashok Khandelwal, after concluding that no prima facie case exists against them in a fraud complaint linked to a fake platform that impersonated the exchange.
The joint order determined that the founders were not present in Mumbra when the reported events took place. The magistrate also placed on record that the informant himself acknowledged before the court that “another person, posing as the accused, deceived the complainant,” a detail that proved central to the judicial decision. The investigating officer raised no objection to the release of the defendants.

The Trap of CoinDCX’s Fake Domain
According to a statement published by CoinDCX, the fraud was carried out through the site coindcx.pro, a counterfeit domain with no connection to the company. The exchange described the episode as a case of “identity impersonation by third parties” and urged its users to verify domains and operate exclusively through its official channels.
The judge also noted that the informant submitted an affidavit stating that another defendant, identified as Rana, had already reimbursed the defrauded amount. The matter is considered “amicably resolved” between the parties, and the court ruled out any risk of the founders interfering with evidence or witnesses Each was released following the execution of a bail bond of 50,000 Indian rupees, equivalent to approximately $530, on the condition of cooperating with the ongoing investigation.

Founded in 2018 and headquartered in Mumbai, CoinDCX is one of India’s most prominent crypto exchanges. The company reached an estimated valuation of $2.45 billion following a funding round led by Coinbase Ventures in October 2025. The exchange had already faced a security crisis in July 2025, when hackers stole approximately $44 million from an internal operational account, though the company clarified that client funds were not affected.