Ill go through it one more time.
whois btc-e.com
http://whois.domaintools.com/btc-e.comDomain name: BTC-E.COM
Name Server: brad.ns.cloudflare.com
Name Server: gail.ns.cloudflare.com
Creation Date: 2011.06.17
Updated Date: 2013.02.14
Expiration Date: 2013.06.17
Registrant ID: YLNB25U-RU
Registrant Name: Svetleichi Dmitri
Registrant Organization: Svetleichi DmitriRegistrant Street1: 13a, Sobachkina str.
Registrant City: Pushkino
Registrant Postal Code: 854785
NOW... taking that information check out
http://imfed.org/ratings/btc-e-unknown-company/ and READ
The following line is from the website!
The street address 13a Sobachkina str. has been used by a fake shipping and escrow company run by Romanian scammers, according to a blogpost and this site.If you still dont get this, then I dont know what to tell you... and if that IS a fake address. That makes it even more likely that he was the owner of "perfect-cargo.net" the scam site in question.
http://netscammers.blogspot.de/2011/07/perfect-cargonet-selling-your-dead-sons.htmlWell, it's absolutely obvious that address in whois is fake, that's not a big deal. I don't put my real identity information in whois records either, that doesn't make me scammer just because of that. Besides that it matches only partially (postcodes do not match). 13a Sobachkina str. is like John Doe you'd see in context of fill out form templates but in regards to customer's address. This is coming from the example templates about how to fill in domain registration forms as stated in RoadTrain post above. They could be found at domain.perm.ru/org_t.txt or w3.redcom.ru/form_for_ru.html or here within a .doc file
www.b2bnext.ru/files/flib/36.doc (many more you can find searching web for 13a Sobachkina str.).
Your statement is btc-e uses fictuous whois data means btc-e are scammers which I don't think makes any sense.