Swan Bitcoin Claims Ex-Employees 'Stole' Its Mining Business at Tether’s Direction

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Swan Bitcoin has filed suit against a group of former employees and consultants, alleging they “hatched and executed a ‘rain and hellfire’ plan” to "steal" its lucrative bitcoin mining business with the help of Tether, Swan Bitcoin’s one-time ally and fundraising partner.

The lawsuit accuses six employees of looting Swan’s trade secrets – including “highly proprietary code,” hash-rate optimization techniques, and financial models – and using them to create an “illegal facsimile” of Swan’s bitcoin mining operation called Proton Management. After two months of pilfering and planning, the lawsuit claims, the coup-de-grace came on Aug. 8, when they and several other employees resigned “near-simultaneously” to join Proton.

The defendants did all of this, according to Swan, with the go-ahead from Tether. Though Tether is not a named defendant in the suit, a spokesperson for the company has denied any and all implications of wrongdoing.

The stablecoin giant had previously funded Swan’s bitcoin mining operation in Tasmania, Australia in 2023 and, by February, had entered into talks with Swan for another funding round. According to the suit, an advisor for Tether – Zach Lyons of Marlin Capital Partners – told Swan that Tether would lead Swan’s series C fundraising round with a $25 million investment, valuing Swan’s business at a whopping $1 billion.

Things were looking good for Swan, which had aspirations of going public. By July, according to the lawsuit, it was mining one out of every 50 bitcoins worldwide. Tether’s CFO Giancarlo Devasini seemed to be pleased with Swan’s CEO, Cory Klippsten, allegedly telling him “on multiple occasions that in his opinion Klippsten was the best CEO in the space.”

But, while praising Klippsten and pledging funding, Swan says Tether was double-dealing. According to the suit, Lyons began taking secret meetings with Swan’s former head of mining Raphael Zagary in (who is not named as a defendant in the suit) and other employees in late June, telling them that Swan had “no value” to Tether and suggesting that Swan’s employees could potentially leave Swan and go to Tether or another operator and “keep doing what [they’re] doing.”

In a July 11 meeting, Lyons allegedly told Zagary and former Swan Investment Director Santhiran Naidoo that Klippsten “has to realize [Tether] can take away [Swan’s mining business] tomorrow.”

With the tacit blessing of Tether, as well as an alleged agreement to provide “legal cover” for the coup, Swan claims, in mid-July Zagary began to “sow dissent and chaos at Swan, undermine Klippsten, and influence Swan’s consultants and employees to leave Swan”. The $25 million funding commitment from Tether, it became apparent, would no longer be coming.