US Indicts Suspected Russian 'Mastermind' of $4 Billion Bitcoin Laundering Scheme (reuters.com)
schwit1 shares a report from Reuters: A U.S. jury indicted a Russian man on Wednesday as the operator of a digital currency exchange he allegedly used to launder more than $4 billion for people involved in crimes ranging from computer hacking to drug trafficking. Alexander Vinnik was arrested in a small beachside village in northern Greece on Tuesday, according to local authorities, following an investigation led by the U.S. Justice Department along with several other federal agencies and task forces. U.S. officials described Vinnik in a Justice Department statement as the operator of BTC-e, an exchange used to trade the digital currency bitcoin since 2011. They alleged Vinnik and his firm "received" more than $4 billion in bitcoin and did substantial business in the United States without following appropriate protocols to protect against money laundering and other crimes. U.S. authorities also linked him to the failure of Mt. Gox, a Japan-based bitcoin exchange that collapsed in 2014 after being hacked. Vinnik "obtained" funds from the hack of Mt. Gox and laundered them through BTC-e and Tradehill, another San Francisco-based exchange he owned, they said in the statement.
We will find out he met with the Kush and Jr last year. The Mooch will deny it happened right before Jr posts the entire email chain on twitter.
You can launder as much crime money as you want if you are a bank.
Considering the number of people who failed at securing their coins, it's reall difficult.
Sorry libertarians. We tried it and all it's brought us is pain for everyone including and especially those that didn't play the game. It's hard to imagine how Ransomware would work without crypto currency.
because if he took "real" money and exchanged it for "nothing" then he defrauded drug kingpins and they will work faster than the Feds.
Is that if you do any business that touches the US, you can be picked up willy-nilly on most of the planet. The lesson learnt today is not to do any business with the US.
Something to do with getting caught doing it, nothing more.
is BitCoin real now? because if he took "real" money and exchanged it for "nothing" then he defrauded drug kingpins and they will work faster than the Feds.
According to the US gov, its an asset not money. You can buy, sell and trade assets. Buying/selling bitcoins is sort of like stock, you have to note the value when purchased and sold, report the capital gain or loss. So when you buy that cup of coffee with bitcoin be sure to note the value of those coins when purchased/received, the value spent at, and report the gain/loss to the IRS. Actually, your bitcoin client software should be able to do all that for you. I'm sure BTC-e servers are only down while they implement such support for US clients. :-)
FWIW, the argument that bitcoin is an asset not a currency is rational. Its currently too volatile to be a store of value. Although they are a convenient way to transfer money. Buy, transfer, and sell; never hold unless you are a speculator.
Bitcoin is currently only a competitor to PayPal, not the dollar or euro.
I don't get what is different about BTC-e than any other exchange?
A US based exchange requires clients to properly identify themselves. Like online stock trading companies. Laundering would not be possible since there will be logs of a person exchanging bitcoins for alt-coins. There would be a paper trail that crosses the different block chains, coins fully traced.
BTC-e may require ID to bull/sell coins for currency but trading one type of coin for a different type of coin, moving "value" from one blockchain to another, requires only an email address, no actual ID. Even if there is a log and if it is provided to the government the person may still be anonymous.
Short story: the US gov want bitcoin purchases, sales, and transfers to be as well documented as those for stocks when US citizens are involved.
Considering that he was arrested and extradited, he just might be. That tends to put a real crimp in your week.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
How can a US Jury indict someone ?
Surely even in the US indict mean "arrest and charge", so I am not sure how a jury can be involved.
In a trial, yeah sure have a jury, but before a trial ???
The ultimate killer feature is that bitcoin can't be counterfeited or manipulated by a central authority.
Yes, it can. 51% Attack, Majority Hash Rate Attack.
"To date, Ghash.io has twice come dangerously close to obtaining 51% of the bitcoin network's hashing power. The popular pool was able to gain 42% of the network in January, and, just last week, the pool reached a worrying 50%. In theory, obtaining a majority of network power could potentially enable massive double spending and the ability to prevent transaction confirmations, among other potentially nefarious acts. However, despite widespread concern about the vulnerability of the bitcoin network to large mining pools, there remains no easy solution to the issue." Jun 20, 2014
https://www.coindesk.com/51-at...
I lost 45 BTC at Tradehill when they got shut down and narrowly avoided getting hit by the MTGox shutdown. I just last week took my remaining funds out of BTC-E too! Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, just kidding that will never happen and I hope this asshole gets executed.
Ask slashdot: How does one launder money?
I typically just forget to take it out of my pocket before putting my pants through the wash.
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