The court recommendation came a week after the CFTC sent four lawyers and one investigator involved in the My Forex Funds case to "administrative leave".
The agency has been blamed for allegedly mischaracterising a tax payment to freeze all assets of the company running the prop firm and its CEO.
A Special Master has recommended that a U.S. court impose sanctions and "dismiss with prejudice" the case brought by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), accusing the agency of deliberately misleading the court in its high-profile enforcement action against Traders Global Group Inc., the company behind My Forex Funds.
According to Special Master Jose L. Linares:
“In multiple instances, with full knowledge of the error in a sworn declaration submitted to the Court, rather than be upfront, direct, and transparent, the CFTC took deliberate steps down a path of obfuscation and avoidance. In this case in particular, the need for specific deterrence is paramount, and a significant sanction is warranted.”
The court document redacted the names of the attorneys and investigators responsible for the alleged mishandling of the My Forex Funds case. However, from the previous court filings, it is clear that CFTC's lead attorney Ashley Burden was involved in the case. The CFTC investigator whose name came up in the previous court filings is Matthew Edelstein.
The court recommendation came a week after the CFTC placed some of its staff on administrative leave. Although the agency did not detail, a Bloomberg report revealed that four lawyers and one investigator were sent to administrative leave due to their misconduct in the My Forex Funds case.
Murtuza Kazmi, CEO at My Forex Funds
The CFTC initially charged My Forex Funds and its CEO, Murtuza Kazmi, with fraud at the end of August 2023. According to the regulator, the company generated at least $310 million in fees from its proprietary trading business. The platform had more than 135,000 customers between November 2021 and its forced shutdown.
However, the regulatory action—including a temporary restraining order and asset freeze—effectively shut down the business overnight. Following a legal challenge by the defendants’ lawyers, a court unfroze most of Kazmi's assets.
Sanctions Request against the CFTC
My Forex Funds even filed a sanctions motion against the CFTC for alleged misrepresentation of facts. According to previous court filings, the regulator’s lead attorney admitted during an evidentiary hearing that he was “careless and sloppy” during the investigation. The CFTC, however, argued that the evidence presented by the defendants showed the agency’s “mistakes were limited and inadvertent.”
Pham responded to the latest court recommendation:
“As described in detail in the Court’s report, the CFTC engaged in willful and bad faith conduct by making multiple false statements to the Court and other ‘numerous instances of sanctionable behavior’ over the course of a year. This is inexcusable.”
In a joint statement, My Forex Funds’ legal counsel—Quinn Emanuel and King & Spalding—stated:
“The CFTC falsely accused our clients of fraud, shut down their businesses, and froze all of their money on the basis of a false, secret submission to the court. As the Special Master’s findings confirm, the CFTC staff misled the court and violated their duty of candor in order to freeze our clients’ assets. Those already serious transgressions were then compounded by a series of decisions by the CFTC to obfuscate and minimize its wrongdoing—in the Special Master’s words, intentionally and in bad faith."
A Special Master has recommended that a U.S. court impose sanctions and "dismiss with prejudice" the case brought by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), accusing the agency of deliberately misleading the court in its high-profile enforcement action against Traders Global Group Inc., the company behind My Forex Funds.
According to Special Master Jose L. Linares:
“In multiple instances, with full knowledge of the error in a sworn declaration submitted to the Court, rather than be upfront, direct, and transparent, the CFTC took deliberate steps down a path of obfuscation and avoidance. In this case in particular, the need for specific deterrence is paramount, and a significant sanction is warranted.”
The court document redacted the names of the attorneys and investigators responsible for the alleged mishandling of the My Forex Funds case. However, from the previous court filings, it is clear that CFTC's lead attorney Ashley Burden was involved in the case. The CFTC investigator whose name came up in the previous court filings is Matthew Edelstein.
The court recommendation came a week after the CFTC placed some of its staff on administrative leave. Although the agency did not detail, a Bloomberg report revealed that four lawyers and one investigator were sent to administrative leave due to their misconduct in the My Forex Funds case.
Murtuza Kazmi, CEO at My Forex Funds
The CFTC initially charged My Forex Funds and its CEO, Murtuza Kazmi, with fraud at the end of August 2023. According to the regulator, the company generated at least $310 million in fees from its proprietary trading business. The platform had more than 135,000 customers between November 2021 and its forced shutdown.
However, the regulatory action—including a temporary restraining order and asset freeze—effectively shut down the business overnight. Following a legal challenge by the defendants’ lawyers, a court unfroze most of Kazmi's assets.
Sanctions Request against the CFTC
My Forex Funds even filed a sanctions motion against the CFTC for alleged misrepresentation of facts. According to previous court filings, the regulator’s lead attorney admitted during an evidentiary hearing that he was “careless and sloppy” during the investigation. The CFTC, however, argued that the evidence presented by the defendants showed the agency’s “mistakes were limited and inadvertent.”
Pham responded to the latest court recommendation:
“As described in detail in the Court’s report, the CFTC engaged in willful and bad faith conduct by making multiple false statements to the Court and other ‘numerous instances of sanctionable behavior’ over the course of a year. This is inexcusable.”
In a joint statement, My Forex Funds’ legal counsel—Quinn Emanuel and King & Spalding—stated:
“The CFTC falsely accused our clients of fraud, shut down their businesses, and froze all of their money on the basis of a false, secret submission to the court. As the Special Master’s findings confirm, the CFTC staff misled the court and violated their duty of candor in order to freeze our clients’ assets. Those already serious transgressions were then compounded by a series of decisions by the CFTC to obfuscate and minimize its wrongdoing—in the Special Master’s words, intentionally and in bad faith."
Jared Kirui is an Editor at Finance Magnates with more than five years of experience in financial journalism. He covers online trading, fintech, payments, and crypto industries with a focus on companies, regulation and compliance, executive moves, trading technology, and market analysis.
His work has been featured in other media outlets, including Benzinga, ZyCrypto, The Distributed, and The Daily Hodl.
Education:
Bachelor of Commerce degree (Finance option), University of Nairobi
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
iForex posts its first annual results as a listed broker. Also ahead: CFI Financial secures a Brazil license, and prediction markets have a big week, with new ETF launches and fresh Polymarket loss data. It's Thursday, the thirtieth of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
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It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
XTB and Robinhood both post first-quarter earnings. But the numbers point in very different directions. Also ahead: Capital.com pushes into three new markets and signals a move into payments.
It's Wednesday, the 29th of April 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
FM Daily Brief - 28 April 2026
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