Omega Group Collapses, CEO Claims He's a Victim
A cryptocurrency mining scheme that bilked investors out of millions collapsed this year, and its CEO just spent forty minutes on video blaming everyone but himself.
Bartosz Nafalski founded Omega Group in late 2018, promising investors access to profitable GPU mining farms across Europe. The operation, he claimed, would run cryptocurrency mining operations around the clock to generate returns. It didn't work. The company collapsed earlier this year, leaving investors with nothing.
But Nafalski insists he's the real victim here.
His story goes like this: In 2018, CFO Lucas Bozek approached him about building a mining facility. They converted an old dairy farm into a mining operation with help from a man named Pawel and Konrad, who ran customer support. The farm lost money almost immediately.
Instead of absorbing the loss, Nafalski says Bozek pitched an idea: turn it into a multi-level marketing scheme. Omega Group was born. They'd sell memberships to people wanting a piece of the mining operation. No actual mining necessary.
On the video, Nafalski claims he had no control over the operation. Bozek held all the cryptocurrency wallets and managed every dollar. Nafalski was the face, the brand, the guy selling the dream to recruits.
"They used my brand, my face, to use me and you just to get the money in a very perfidious way," he said.
Then there's Wojciech Guzda, the man Nafalski credits as teaching him "how to work in the MLM world." Guzda has a resume most people would hide. He promoted FutureNet, a Ponzi scheme that collapsed in 2018. When that imploded, he switched to GainBitcoin, another Ponzi that also collapsed in 2018.
Nafalski's own business partners weren't newcomers either. He later discovered that Bozek, Pawel, and Konrad had all worked together in Exp Asset, yet another Ponzi scheme. Exp Asset's founder is Patryk Krupinski, a man Nafalski describes as someone with whom he has a "good relationship."
This is where Nafalski's defense crumbles. He admits Bozek, Pawel, and Konrad planned Omega Group as a con from day one. They needed a fall guy. They needed someone to take the blame when the scheme inevitably collapsed. They needed Bartosz Nafalski.
"It is my fault and I am sorry for that. I feel terrible because I believed them," he said on the video.
But believing con artists isn't an excuse. Nafalski surrounded himself with serial scammers, promoted the scheme to ordinary people desperate for returns, and profited while the operation ran. Only when it all fell apart did he suddenly discover he'd been duped.
Omega Group investors know better. They lost everything. And Nafalski is still the only face anyone remembers.
🤖 Quick Answer
What was Omega Group and what did it promise investors?Omega Group was a cryptocurrency mining company founded by Bartosz Nafalski in late 2018. It promised investors access to profitable GPU mining farms throughout Europe that would operate continuously to generate cryptocurrency returns.
How did Omega Group's operations end?
The company collapsed in 2024, leaving investors with total losses. The mining operation, which converted a former dairy farm into a mining facility, failed to deliver the promised returns to its stakeholders.
What is Nafalski's position regarding the company's collapse?
Nafalski claims he is a victim of the situation rather than bearing responsibility. He attributes the failure to other individuals involved in the operation, including CFO Lucas Bozek and associates named Pawel and Konrad.
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