Charles Parks III, the cryptojacking convict known as CP3O, faces scrutiny over alleged crypto activity from behind bars

Charles Parks III, the cryptojacking convict known as CP3O, faces scrutiny over alleged crypto activity from behind bars

The man who defrauded cloud providers of $3.5 million in computing resources to mine crypto is now accused of continuing his schemes while incarcerated.

Charles O. Parks III, who goes by the nickname “CP3O” (yes, like the Star Wars droid, but with worse judgment), is reportedly facing new allegations tied to cryptocurrency-related activity conducted while he’s been serving time.

Parks was sentenced on August 15, 2025, to one year and one day in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud. The underlying scheme was a cryptojacking operation that ran from January through August 2021, during which he fraudulently obtained over $3.5 million worth of cloud computing resources from two major providers. He used those stolen resources to mine crypto, pocketing nearly $1 million in digital assets.

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The original scheme: cloud theft at scale

The mined assets reportedly included Ether, Litecoin, and Monero, a mix that tells you something about Parks’ strategy. Monero in particular is the privacy coin of choice for people who don’t want their transactions traced.

Parks pleaded guilty to wire fraud in December 2024, though his original indictment included additional charges for money laundering and unlawful monetary transactions. US District Judge Eric Komitee, presiding in the Eastern District of New York, handed down the sentence and ordered Parks to forfeit $500,000 along with a luxury Mercedes-Benz purchased with proceeds from the scheme.

A one-year-and-a-day sentence for a $3.5 million fraud might seem light. But in the federal system, that extra day over the one-year mark actually matters: it makes the defendant eligible for good-time credit, potentially reducing the actual time served.

What this means for the market and regulation

The forfeiture order in Parks’ case, $500,000 plus a Mercedes-Benz, illustrates how federal authorities are getting more sophisticated about tracing crypto proceeds back to tangible assets. That kind of forensic capability is expanding rapidly.

Monero’s privacy features have long made it a focal point for regulators. Several exchanges have delisted it under pressure, and its inclusion in Parks’ mining portfolio only reinforces the narrative that privacy coins attract illicit use.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Charles Parks III, the cryptojacking convict known as CP3O, faces scrutiny over alleged crypto activity from behind bars

Charles Parks III, the cryptojacking convict known as CP3O, faces scrutiny over alleged crypto activity from behind bars

The man who defrauded cloud providers of $3.5 million in computing resources to mine crypto is now accused of continuing his schemes while incarcerated.

Charles O. Parks III, who goes by the nickname “CP3O” (yes, like the Star Wars droid, but with worse judgment), is reportedly facing new allegations tied to cryptocurrency-related activity conducted while he’s been serving time.

Parks was sentenced on August 15, 2025, to one year and one day in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud. The underlying scheme was a cryptojacking operation that ran from January through August 2021, during which he fraudulently obtained over $3.5 million worth of cloud computing resources from two major providers. He used those stolen resources to mine crypto, pocketing nearly $1 million in digital assets.

Advertisement

The original scheme: cloud theft at scale

The mined assets reportedly included Ether, Litecoin, and Monero, a mix that tells you something about Parks’ strategy. Monero in particular is the privacy coin of choice for people who don’t want their transactions traced.

Parks pleaded guilty to wire fraud in December 2024, though his original indictment included additional charges for money laundering and unlawful monetary transactions. US District Judge Eric Komitee, presiding in the Eastern District of New York, handed down the sentence and ordered Parks to forfeit $500,000 along with a luxury Mercedes-Benz purchased with proceeds from the scheme.

A one-year-and-a-day sentence for a $3.5 million fraud might seem light. But in the federal system, that extra day over the one-year mark actually matters: it makes the defendant eligible for good-time credit, potentially reducing the actual time served.

What this means for the market and regulation

The forfeiture order in Parks’ case, $500,000 plus a Mercedes-Benz, illustrates how federal authorities are getting more sophisticated about tracing crypto proceeds back to tangible assets. That kind of forensic capability is expanding rapidly.

Monero’s privacy features have long made it a focal point for regulators. Several exchanges have delisted it under pressure, and its inclusion in Parks’ mining portfolio only reinforces the narrative that privacy coins attract illicit use.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.