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BREAKING! $50 Real Estate Token Empire Collapses, Tens of Thousands of Retail Investors Buried Alive, Is Crypto "Democratization" Actually the Most Shameful Pump-and-Dump Scheme in History?
In Detroit, Michigan, an underground basement of a duplex built in the 1920s. The air is mixed with the smell of damp brick walls, standing water, mold, and bleach. Tenant Cornell Dorris has lived here for nearly ten years. He points to the black water and rat droppings spreading across the floor, saying that when it rains, water floods in. Squirrels are upstairs, the bathtub has no hot water, and he can only shower at the sink.
The landlord of this building is a startup called RealT. In 2019, the Jacobson brothers from Canada proposed a vision: using blockchain technology behind $BTC to split a property into thousands of tokens worth about $50 each, allowing investors worldwide to become landlords, share rental income and appreciation gains, with annual returns of up to 12%. This story of “real estate democratization” quickly captured the hearts of at least 16,000 investors from 150 countries.
RealT has aggressively acquired nearly 500 properties in Detroit, with about 200 more in other U.S. cities, and the total asset portfolio once reached approximately $150 million. Market analysts note that the company once claimed to be the world’s largest real estate tokenization platform. Tokens often sold out instantly upon launch, and the website crashed due to high traffic. A French investor using the pseudonym TokNist said this fulfilled the wish of many ordinary people like him who couldn’t get traditional bank loans to invest in real estate.
However, the glamorous token economy on the blockchain cannot hide the rot of the physical properties offline. In summer 2024, investigations revealed that many properties under RealT were in extremely poor condition. Municipal inspectors documented hundreds of violations: missing smoke detectors, water leaks and mold, structural damage. Some buildings were sealed after fires, some apartments were occupied and rented out by gangs, and many properties had long overdue taxes.
Tenant Maya described her place as having a large hole in the ceiling, insulation hanging into the bedroom, and only daring to sleep in the living room. Another tenant, Monica, lives with her grandchildren; her home’s heating is broken, water supply unstable, and windows shattered. She is too frightened to sleep. Both had tried to withhold rent to pressure the landlord into repairs.
In July 2025, Detroit’s city government filed a lawsuit against RealT, its founders, and 165 related LLCs, accusing them of hundreds of violations of public nuisance and regulatory violations, owing hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines and property taxes. The lawsuit stated that 408 properties lacked proper compliance certificates. A temporary restraining order was subsequently issued by the judge.
Facing the crisis, the Jacobson brothers blamed fraud and negligence by property management companies and other partners, and sued early partner Shawn Reed, accusing him of inflating repair costs. Reed counterclaimed, saying he was never responsible for daily management and was being made a scapegoat. The brothers set up a new property management company to handle the aftermath but admitted the workload was enormous.
In investor groups on Telegram, doubts began to emerge. Some investors discovered that RealT had provided mortgage loans for two tokenized properties in Chicago, which could risk the tokens being foreclosed. Jean-Marc Jacobson explained this was a “corporate-level operation” to facilitate transactions, but a business school professor noted this was unusual.
What further unsettled investors was that some properties, already deemed dangerous buildings by the city, continued generating “rental” income. In February 2026, the Jacobson brothers announced plans to sell many properties to “optimize returns,” but would suspend rent distributions to all investors, which some called “theft.”
Currently, Detroit’s trial is scheduled to begin in May. RealT has shifted its focus to tokenizing “under-construction” properties in Colombia and Panama, but new token sales are slow, with thousands still unsold. What began as a $50 landlord dream has evolved into a disaster involving legal battles and complete trust breakdown, exposing the irreconcilable gap between offline property management responsibilities and on-chain financial promises in asset tokenization.