Leviev insisted that he never swindled anybody and, thanks to The Tinder Swinder, he's rolling in cash.
"I did not swindle nobody," he argued. "I am making s--tloads of money every day thanks to Netflix...hell of a lot of money thanks to that."
We guess all publicity is good publicity?
Leviev said his enemies are on his tail and they are "crazy motherf--kers." When asked if he was concerned about going to jail, Leviev balked and said "maybe those girls will go to jail for defamation."
Leviev said he's working on his own documentary, which is in the final stages. He said it will tell his side of the story. "You won't believe what you're going to see," he said. He argued that if viewers thought The Tindler Swindler was jaw-dropping, "you have really no idea what's coming up…you're going to be shocked of your life seriously."
In addition, he said he's currently waiting on his U.S. visa—he currently lives in Tel Aviv—so he can record a song with French Montana, and maybe Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent. "I have great things coming up very, very soon," he assured.
Leviev insisted that he's no longer on Tinder. He said he hasn't been on the dating app since 2018 and any profile using his photo is fake, adding that is "nothing to do with me."
He said he filed a police report against all of the fake accounts.
Despite the charges and claims against him, Leviev said he supports himself financially. He credits getting in on the ground floor of Bitcoin for much of it.
"This is how you make the money in places that people don't want to touch," he noted. "If I believe in it I'm going for it."
He even went so far as to flaunt his wealth, saying that his clothes and watches are worth thousands of dollars. "My security for a month cost more than they say what I took allegedly," he claimed.
Despite the fury of activity and allegations surrounding him, Leviev insisted he's not worried. "I'm not in prison and I'm not going to be in prison," he said bluntly.
He alleged that the police are actively "helping him" along the way and the women featured in The Tinder Swindler are "lame" and "got millions from Netflix." Leviev said over 100 million people watched the documentary, which seemed to make him very proud.