Paragon Coin — Cannabis Blockchain ICO Settled with the SEC, Never Delivered Its Product
Summary
Paragon Coin Inc. raised approximately $12 million from investors between August and October 2017 through an unregistered token sale, marketing its PRG token as the currency of a blockchain infrastructure platform built specifically for the cannabis industry. The project was co-founded by Jessica VerSteeg — former Miss Iowa, model, and social media personality — and her husband Egor Lavrov. Paragon's promotional campaign featured endorsements from prominent figures including rapper The Game (Jayceon Taylor), who publicly declared on social media that Paragon was "preparing to revolutionize cannabis and the world." In November 2018, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission settled administrative cease-and-desist proceedings against Paragon Coin Inc., requiring the company to pay a $250,000 civil monetary penalty, register its PRG tokens as securities, and offer to refund investors. No fraud charges were filed; the SEC charged only that Paragon had sold unregistered securities in violation of Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act of 1933. Paragon filed for bankruptcy in April 2020. The SEC ultimately distributed approximately $175,000 from a Fair Fund to affected investors — a fraction of the $12 million raised.
The ROSTER entry for this file lists the status as "Convicted." This requires clarification. The SEC action against Paragon Coin was a civil administrative settlement, not a criminal conviction. Paragon Coin Inc. consented to the cease-and-desist order without admitting or denying the SEC's findings. No individual associated with Paragon — including VerSteeg or Lavrov — was criminally indicted or convicted in the criminal sense in connection with the ICO itself. The civil settlement, while legally significant as one of the first SEC enforcement actions imposing penalties solely for an unregistered ICO, did not result in prison sentences, criminal records, or findings of fraud against any individual. The "Convicted" designation in the ROSTER reflects the civil resolution and the court-ordered liability entered against The Game in a subsequent class action, discussed below. Readers should understand that this is a civil resolution, not a criminal one.
Timeline
The Architecture of the Cannabis Blockchain Pitch
Paragon Coin occupied an intersection of two powerful 2017 narratives: the ICO boom, which had normalized the idea that a token sale whitepaper was sufficient to raise millions of dollars before any product existed, and the cannabis industry's rapid growth following state-level legalization in the United States. The cannabis sector faced genuine operational challenges — federally illegal status restricted cannabis businesses' access to banking, payment processors, and supply chain software that normal businesses took for granted. A blockchain platform explicitly designed for the cannabis industry addressed a real problem, and that real problem gave Paragon's pitch documentary plausibility that purely speculative ICOs lacked.
The PRG token's described use case — as a payment instrument within Paragon's cannabis supply chain ecosystem — followed the standard 2017 utility token framing, by which projects sought to avoid securities regulation. The SEC's November 2018 action settled the legal question: PRG tokens were securities within the meaning of the Securities Act, regardless of the "utility" label, and had been sold to retail investors with no prospectus, no audited financials, and no registered investment advisor. By the time the bankruptcy filing arrived in April 2020, the company had exhausted its ICO proceeds without producing a deployed, commercially viable product.
Celebrity Endorsement as Unregistered Securities Distribution
The involvement of The Game (Jayceon Taylor) in Paragon's promotion is legally significant beyond its role as a marketing instrument. Securities law in the United States requires that individuals who solicit investment in securities — including by publicly promoting them — either be registered broker-dealers or fall within a recognized exemption. Celebrities who promote investment products to their audiences while receiving undisclosed compensation are, under SEC interpretive guidance, functioning as unregistered finders or promoters of securities offerings.
The Game's public endorsement of Paragon Coin on social media in 2017 — where he reached millions of followers with content framing PRG as a revolutionary investment — was promotional activity for an unregistered securities offering. Court proceedings in a subsequent class action established that Taylor received compensation for this promotion without disclosing that compensation to investors, in violation of standards applicable to securities marketing. In June 2021, a California federal court found Taylor jointly and severally liable for $12 million — the full amount investors claimed to have lost — plus prejudgment interest. This judgment substantially exceeded the $250,000 civil penalty the SEC imposed on the company itself.
The Paragon case, alongside the SEC's concurrent actions against Floyd Mayweather and DJ Khaled for undisclosed ICO promotions in the Centra Tech case, established a clear regulatory position: celebrity endorsers of token sales who receive undisclosed compensation are not exempt from securities law obligations.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The SEC's November 2018 settlement with Paragon Coin was the first enforcement action imposing civil penalties solely for an unregistered ICO, marking the SEC's willingness to assert securities law jurisdiction over the token sale market without alleging fraud. Neither VerSteeg nor Lavrov was individually named as a respondent; the action ran against the corporate entity. The company's bankruptcy in April 2020 extinguished any residual capacity to deliver refunds from operating revenue.
The most financially significant legal outcome for investors came from the class action judgment against The Game in 2021 — a $12 million liability finding against Taylor — not from the SEC action itself. Whether that judgment was ultimately collectible has not been publicly confirmed. The SEC Fair Fund distribution of approximately $175,000 represents the only documented return of funds from the regulatory proceedings: less than 1.5 percent of the $12 million raised. Paragon Coin is instructive precisely because the SEC acted and used available tools, yet investor recovery remained negligible.
Lessons
- A celebrity endorsement is not a substitute for independently verified information about an investment's legal status, the issuer's financial position, or the existence of a working product; celebrity endorsers are frequently paid for promotion and are not performing investment due diligence on the investor's behalf.
- A token labeled as a "utility token" is not exempt from securities law; the legal classification depends on economic substance, not the issuer's chosen terminology — and investors in unregistered token sales have no prospectus, no audited financials, and no registered broker-dealer obligations protecting them.
- SEC civil enforcement without fraud charges produces injunctions, penalties, and refund orders but rarely results in full victim restitution; by the time regulators act, ICO proceeds are typically spent, and civil penalties are orders of magnitude smaller than investor losses.
- A cannabis or other emerging-sector narrative that addresses genuine industry problems lends credibility to a project independently of its actual execution capacity; the real-world problem a project claims to solve does not guarantee that the project can build the proposed solution.
- Investors should independently verify whether a token sale is registered with the relevant securities regulator before contributing funds; the absence of registration is not a technicality — it means the investor has no legal disclosure rights and no regulatory protection if the offering fails.
References
- In the Matter of Paragon Coin, Inc. — SEC Administrative Proceeding File No. 3-18897 SEC.gov
- SEC Enforcement Has Decimated ICO-Funded Startup ParagonCoin Decrypt
- Investors in Paragon's $12 Million Cannabis Crypto ICO Will Finally Get Some Money Back Decrypt
- Rapper The Game Stares Down $12M Joint Class Action Over Paragon ICO CoinDesk
- Paragon Announces Settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Globe Newswire