The Gone Girl of Wall Street: How a False Story Destroyed a Real Investor — and Why the Truth Is Finally Winning

In Gone Girl, a woman meticulously constructs a false identity to destroy her husband’s life. The media believes every word. The public convicts him before any trial. He had no idea the trap was being set. Sound familiar?
Barry Honig didn’t disappear. But for seven years, a version of him was invented — a cartoon villain of Wall Street — and that invented character was broadcast across financial media, Twitter, and cable news. The public convicted the character. The real person was left trying to prove a negative.
Now, thanks to a federal indictment, SEC enforcement actions, and a new civil lawsuit filed in May 2026, the people who wrote that false character are themselves the ones facing justice. The plot has flipped.
A note on context: In 2019, Honig settled separate SEC charges related to three unrelated microcap stocks, accepting a penny stock bar without admitting or denying wrongdoing. That case is distinct from PolarityTE. In the PolarityTE matter — the subject of this article — Honig was a shareholder victimized by a scheme the U.S. government has now formally confirmed and prosecuted.
The Setup: Someone Wrote the Script
In Gone Girl, ‘Amazing Amy’ is a character created to be believed — crafted with just enough detail, just enough emotion, just enough apparent evidence to feel completely real. The audience doesn’t question it because the story is told so confidently.
That’s exactly what Citron Research did. Andrew Left didn’t just write negative stock reports. He wrote in a style designed to feel like an exposé — sensationalist, urgent, moral. His reports called companies ‘FRAUD’ in capital letters. They used phrases like ‘the SEC should immediately HALT this stock’ and ‘investors have been warned.’ They included dramatic price targets far below current trading levels.
And crucially — he presented it all as independent, unbiased research. In August 2019, Left claimed publicly that Citron had ‘never been compensated by a third party to publish research.’
That was a lie. The DOJ says so. The SEC proved it.
The Hidden Screenwriters: Anson Funds
In Gone Girl, the husband doesn’t know who’s pulling the strings. Neither did Honig.
Behind Citron Research sat Anson Funds Management — a $2.9 billion hedge fund based in Dallas, run by Moez Kassam. The SEC confirmed in its June 2024 order that from at least 2018 to 2023, Anson secretly paid Left to publish attacks on companies Anson was already shorting. The payment trail was deliberately buried: money flowed from Anson to a third party called Falcon Research, using fake invoices for ‘research services’ that were never performed, then forwarded on to Left.
The SEC found that Anson hid the fact that its strategy involved working with activist short publishers, trading around the time reports were issued, and paying a portion of fund profits to those publishers in exchange for advance access to their work. — SEC Order, Rel. No. 6622, June 11, 2024
Here’s how the cycle worked: Anson would short a stock. Citron would publish the attack. The stock would crash. Anson would cover its position and collect millions. Left would get his cut. And the company — and its innocent shareholders — would be left in ruins.
PolarityTE was one of those companies. Barry Honig and his family entities owned nearly 10% of PolarityTE at the time of the attacks. They had no idea who was writing the script.
The ‘Dead Patent’ That Wasn’t Dead
Every great false narrative needs a smoking gun — a single ‘fact’ so damning that no one bothers to check whether it’s actually true.
Citron’s smoking gun was the patent. In June 2018, they published a report screaming that PolarityTE’s patent application had been rejected by the USPTO — ‘dead on arrival,’ with ‘odds in the low single digits’ of recovery. The report accused management of hiding this from investors and called the situation ‘not only securities fraud, but criminal fraud.’
There was just one problem: the patent wasn’t dead.
A USPTO ‘final rejection’ is a legal term of art — a procedural step in the process, not a death sentence. Companies that receive them and keep pursuing their application get a patent roughly 70% of the time. PolarityTE did exactly that. In February 2021 — nearly three years after Citron declared it dead — the USPTO granted PolarityTE its patent.
The class action lawsuit filed against PolarityTE on the basis of Citron’s patent claims? Dismissed.
But the stock was already destroyed. Once the false story is believed, the truth arrives too late.
The Media Plays Its Role
In Gone Girl, the media becomes a character in its own right — amplifying and shaping public perception before any facts are established. The accused’s guilt is assumed. Every statement he makes is filtered through suspicion.
Left had over 100,000 Twitter followers. His reports were picked up by financial media, repeated on CNBC, and cited in mainstream articles. The DOJ alleges he boasted to colleagues that he could ‘destroy’ companies with a single tweet, and that a Business Insider article noted he could ‘send a stock tumbling with a single tweet’ — a quote Left himself repeated.
He was right. And for companies and investors like Honig who were targeted, that wasn’t a boast. It was a weapon.
The Twist: The Script Writers Get Caught
In Gone Girl, the twist arrives late. The person who seemed to be the victim turns out to be the architect of the destruction.
In July 2024, Andrew Left was charged in a 19-count indictment by the U.S. Department of Justice — 1 count of engaging in a securities fraud scheme, 17 counts of securities fraud, and 1 count of making false statements to federal investigators. The DOJ says his scheme generated at least $16 million in illicit profits across 21 targeted companies over a period running from 2018 to 2023. His trial is now scheduled for May 11, 2026 in Los Angeles federal court.
The SEC, in a parallel civil action, put the profit figure higher — alleging a $20 million scheme targeting 23 companies. The SEC’s maximum penalty exposure, added across all counts, runs to hundreds of years in prison if convicted.
Anson Funds paid $2.25 million in penalties to the SEC. Ryan Choi — Left’s partner who executed trades at Citron Capital — paid over $1.8 million to settle SEC charges. Hindenburg Research, another short seller connected to the broader network, shut down its operations while investigations were ongoing.
And PolarityTE was named explicitly in the DOJ indictment as one of the companies targeted by the scheme.
Seven Years Later: The Real Story
Barry Honig’s RIOT Blockchain investment — another Citron target — was cleared by the SEC in 2020, when the agency’s Denver Regional Office closed its investigation and stated it did not intend to recommend enforcement action. RIOT Platforms is today worth billions. MARA Holdings, another company Honig helped build, is similarly valued. The ‘frauds’ Citron screamed about turned out to be real businesses with real assets.
In May 2026, Honig filed a civil lawsuit in Dallas federal court against Anson Funds, Moez Kassam, Sunny Puri, and Ryan Choi. The complaint lays out — in 32 pages, backed by the SEC order and DOJ indictment — exactly what was done, how it was concealed, and what it cost.
In Gone Girl, the movie ends ambiguously. The truth is known, but full accountability is elusive.
This story is still being written. But for the first time in seven years, the people holding the pen are the ones seeking justice — not the ones who manufactured the lie.
The scheme generated millions of dollars in illicit profits for its perpetrators, while inflicting billions of dollars in losses upon the targeted companies and those companies’ innocent shareholders. — Honig v. Anson Funds, First Amended Complaint