- The Breakdown
- Posts
- Tornado Cash Developer Roman Storm to Stand Trial in December
Tornado Cash Developer Roman Storm to Stand Trial in December
Plus DOJ Disrupts Russian Crypto Network Involved in Money Laundering
The Breakdown First Five - Friday, September 27, 2024
Welcome back to The Breakdown First Five — the 5 most interesting and/or important stories in bitcoin, crypto, and markets to start your day.
5. Swan’s Mega Lawsuit
Swan Bitcoin has filed a sprawling lawsuit against several former employees for “stealing the crown jewels”. Swan alleges that the defendants stole code for mining software, used it to launch a rival company and even convinced Tether to cut Swan out of a joint venture deal. Swan referred to the plan as “rain and hellfire”. Execution of the plan coincided with Swan’s decline and massive wave of layoffs earlier this year.
After looking at the @Swan lawsuit, it looks like Swan claims that Rapha Zagury teamed up with Tether to sabotage their mining operations. They claim key employees jumped ship with inside info to start a competitor and Tether conveniently facilitated the whole thing. Thoughts? 🧐
— Justin Bechler (@1914ad)
11:22 PM • Sep 26, 2024
4. Gensler’s Warning
During an interview with CNBC’s Squak Box, Gary Gensler warned the crypto industry “will not long persist without investor protection”. He avoided giving an opinion on Trump’s Bitcoin reserve, save for reiterating that it is not a security. Gensler seemed to urge investors to use the ETF, stating that investors now have a way to express their views. He also confirmed that BNY Mellon has been granted an exception to SAB121 and will be allowed to offer custody.
In the green room at @SquawkCNBC : @GaryGensler@mcuban
— Jacqueline Corba (@jm_corba)
12:40 PM • Sep 26, 2024
3. WazirX Granted Moratorium
Indian crypto exchange WazirX has been granted a four-month moratorium on dealing with their affairs after losing $234M in a hack that impaired customer funds. The Singapore court found they were acting in “good faith” but urged the exchange to “think about” releasing a full list of remaining assets. The exchange said they were headed towards a winding up but will attempt to return tokens in kind to users. Customers are irate at both the platform and the government.
Top explainer. With the legal moratorium, WazirX has bought itself some time to figure out how to manage the funds and investigate what happened before it can be sued. WazirX has been facing immense backlash to its moratorium plans from day one.
— Ashish K. Mishra (@akm1410)
6:19 AM • Sep 27, 2024
2. Russia’s Crypto Network Disrupted
The DOJ has taken action to “disrupt a global cryptocurrency network” involved in Russian money laundering and sanctions evasion. In collaboration with global authorities several websites were taken down and two Russian nationals have been charged. Around $1.15B is claimed to have been transacted across the network, which the DOJ claimed had facilitated “darknet drug traffickers and ransomware operators."
Russian crypto exchange PM2BTC associated with Sergey Sergeevich Ivanov is labeled a primary money laundering concern in connection with Russian illicit finance. OFAC is sanctioning Ivanov and the crypto exchange "Cryptex" A number of websites seized by US and Dutch law… x.com/i/web/status/1…
— Bill Hughes : wchughes.eth 🦊 (@BillHughesDC)
2:58 PM • Sep 26, 2024
1. Tornado Cash Case Continues
Roman Storm has been unsuccessful in getting his criminal case dismissed. The judge ruled that there was no custody requirement in the legislative definition of a money transmitter, implicitly threatening the entire industry with additional requirements. Further she said that Storm had done more than merely writing code as protected speech and may have known he was handling dirty money even without direct collaboration. Storm will stand trial in December.
“Control is not necessary to establish money transmission”
It’s time to get out, Americans
Your 4626 vaults are getting you done for laundering
— laurence (@functi0nZer0)
10:01 PM • Sep 26, 2024