A co-founder of Tornado Cash is convicted of money laundering, the IMF tells Nigeria to regulate crypto exchanges, and Binance wins registration in India, despite enforcement action in the US.
A 31-year-old developer has been聽 to five years and four months in a Dutch prison for his role in helping to build Tornado Cash, a 鈥溾 virtual currency mixer.
On Tuesday (May 14), Alexey Pertsev was found guilty of 鈥渄eveloping and maintaining鈥 a 鈥渟oftware tool鈥 that was used by criminals to launder more than $2bn in illicit funds.
Pertsev, a Russian national, was living in Amsterdam at the time of his arrest in August 2022, and was convicted in a Netherlands court. He was accused of aiding crypto money laundering activities across multiple jurisdictions, including the US, the Netherlands, Russia and the United Arab Emirate, between 2019 and 2022.
鈥淭ornado Cash has been developed in such a way that it automatically carries out the actions essential for money laundering,鈥 Pertsev鈥檚 judgment reads.
鈥淚t combines maximum anonymity and optimal concealment techniques on the one hand, with a serious lack of functionalities that enable identification, control or detection on the other.
鈥淎s a result, Tornado Cash cannot be characterised as a legitimate tool that has been unintentionally abused by criminals.鈥
Court documents describe Tornado Cash as a 鈥渃ollection bin鈥 where crypto-assets can be deposited from one Ethereum wallet and withdrawn from another.
Using sophisticated cryptography, Tornado Cash 鈥渢erminates鈥 the transaction trail on the underlying blockchain, thereby concealing both the sender and receiver of each transaction.
鈥淭he defendant declared that it was never his intention to break the law or to facilitate criminal activities,鈥 the judgment adds. 鈥淲ith Tornado Cash, he wanted to offer a legitimate solution to the growing need for privacy in the crypto community. The court disagrees.鈥
Judge Henrieke Slaar, sentencing, ruled that Pertsev is 鈥渃ompletely responsible鈥 for the fact that Tornado Cash 鈥渢akes care鈥 of criminals because that is how he designed it.
鈥淚f the defendant had wanted to have the ability to take action against misuse, then he could have built that in, but he did not,鈥 the judge said.
鈥淭ornado Cash does not pose any barrier to those with criminal assets who want to launder them, and that is why the court regards the defendant guilty of the money laundering activities as charged.鈥
Prosecutors noted that it is 鈥渃ommon knowledge鈥 that crypto mixers are used by criminals, and that Pertsev was aware of this but made no effort to stop it.
During the trial, the court was shown group chat messages in which Pertsev discusses major hacks of crypto platforms and the likelihood that the proceeds were being laundered through Tornado Cash.
For example, US authorities have聽 that North Korea鈥檚 Lazarus Group used Tornado Cash to launder $450m of Ethereum from the hack of Axie Infinity, a blockchain-based game, in April 2022.
According to the US Treasury鈥檚 Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), Lazarus Group鈥檚 illicit profits help to finance the North Korean dictatorship and聽.
In addition to the prison sentence, Pertsev must forfeit $1.2m of crypto-assets, a Porsche sports car and 鈧36,000 held in a Swiss bank account.
Meanwhile, the two other co-founders of Tornado Cash, Roman Storm and Roman Semenov, remain聽 in the US, where they聽face charges of money laundering and sanctions evasion.
IMF tells Nigeria to regulate crypto exchanges
础听 by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has urged Nigeria to take a more welcoming approach to crypto exchanges, despite its ongoing feud with the world鈥檚 largest exchange, Binance.
Under Article IV of its Articles of Agreement, the IMF holds bilateral discussions with member states, usually once a year, and follows up with a report outlining current risks and policy recommendations.
In its latest report, Nigeria鈥檚 handling of crypto firms gains several mentions, mostly in relation to the devaluation of the naira.
Since June 2023, as聽covered by 91天堂原創, the naira has lost 70 percent of its value against the US dollar 鈥 a collapse that the government has blamed primarily on capital flight and speculation fuelled by Binance.
The IMF notes that at the end of February this year, Nigeria forced Binance and other crypto exchanges to close their local operations.
Although the fund acknowledged Nigeria鈥檚 claims that these platforms were helping to facilitate capital flight, it also noted that 鈥渘either the identity of traders nor the origin of their funds could be traced鈥.
鈥淸IMF] staff recommend that global crypto trading platforms be registered or licensed in Nigeria and subject to the same regulatory requirements applicable to financial intermediaries,鈥 it said.
These requirements should follow the principle of 鈥渟ame activity, same risk and same regulation鈥, and should also ensure that crypto exchanges apply 鈥減reventive controls鈥 against money laundering and terrorist financing.
The IMF鈥檚 report follows a 4,000-word聽 from Binance CEO Richard Teng, who claimed last week that the exchange had tried to become licensed in Nigeria, but the authorities never responded.
Teng added that, to this day, no crypto exchange has obtained a licence to operate in Nigeria.
Indian regulator confirms Binance registration
Meanwhile, in India, Binance is reported to have sealed a new registration with the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), which had previously banned the exchange for operating illegally.
As reported by聽, FIU director Vivek Aggarwal confirmed the registration during a meeting with several financial journalists, but the regulator has not yet announced it officially.
Aggarwal said the announcement will be made following the FIU鈥檚 decision on how much to fine Binance for its previous illegal conduct in India, which ended with the ban that was imposed in December 2023.
Last month, India鈥檚 Economic Times聽 that Binance has agreed to settle the case with the FIU for a fine of $2m, citing people familiar with the matter 鈥 a claim that Aggarwal denied.
鈥淏inance is registered but the compliance proceedings are not completed because the amount of penalty has to be decided by me, and that hearing is still going on,鈥 he said.