Kalder CEO Gökçe Güven pleads guilty to $7m securities fraud, Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree charged with two sets of books
The Turkish-American fintech founder faked $1.2m in ARR (actual: $60k), forged brand partnership documents, and committed visa fraud using an extraordinary-ability application built on fabricated credentials; sentencing September 2026
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Summary
Gökçe Güven, founder and CEO of New York Fintech startup Kalder, pleaded guilty to one count of securities fraud in the Southern District of New York after being charged in February 2026. Güven raised $7m in a seed round from more than a dozen investors in April 2024 using pitch materials claiming 26 brands were live customers and 53 were in live freemium. Internal records showed the company had generated approximately $60,000 in total revenue as of April 2025, against the $1.2m ARR presented to investors. Prosecutors found she maintained two sets of books: accurate internal records and fabricated investor-facing materials, including forged brand-partnership documents and fictitious signature pages. Güven also pleaded guilty to visa fraud: she obtained an O-1 "extraordinary ability" visa using credentials that prosecutors say were forged or exaggerated. She was a Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree. The agreed forfeiture is nearly $7m; sentencing is scheduled for 17 September 2026. Kalder's case follows the 2025 convictions of founders at Aspiration Partners and CaaStle, as the DOJ's SDNY office continues to prosecute startup fraud cases that emerged from the 2021-2024 easy-money period.
The split
US fintech and legal press focus on two distinct angles. TechCrunch and specialist startup outlets emphasise the two-sets-of-books scheme and the visa fraud as compounding a straightforward securities case into a more serious federal indictment. American Banker's angle is due-diligence failure: 13 investors put $7m into Kalder without independently verifying the brand partnerships that formed the core of the pitch. Turkish-language media covers the case as a diaspora cautionary tale, noting the pressure on international founders to perform growth metrics before they have real traction. No party disputes the facts; the plea agreement removes any trial angle.
By the numbers
- $7m, amount raised in the fraudulent seed round.
- $60,000, actual total revenue as of April 2025 vs. $1.2m ARR claimed.
- 26, brands claimed as live customers (in reality only pilots at reduced or zero cost).
- 13+, investors who participated in the seed round.
- September 17, 2026, scheduled sentencing date.
- Forbes 30 Under 30, the prestige ranking Güven held before charges.
Why it matters
Kalder is the clearest 2026 instance of what prosecutors and investors call the two-sets-of-books pattern: a startup that maintains accurate internal financial records while presenting fabricated metrics to investors. The pattern requires a sophisticated deliberate choice, not accidental rounding, and is categorically more serious than optimistic projections. The Forbes 30 Under 30 recognition amplifies the case because it illustrates how prestige rankings can be used as social proof by founders with no verified track record. For early-stage New York Tech investors, the case reinforces pressure for independent verification of ARR and customer contracts, particularly at seed, where formal due-diligence processes are lighter.
What to watch
- Sentencing outcome on September 17: prosecutors will argue for a guideline sentence based on the $7m fraud amount.
- Whether any of the 13 investors pursue civil claims in addition to the criminal proceeding.
- Regulatory response: the SEC is co-investigating; whether it files separate charges against Güven or co-conspirators.
- Whether the SDNY brings additional cases from the same 2021-2024 cohort of inflated startup metrics.