US indicts alleged Russian money-laundering 'mastermind' behind $4 billion bitcoin exchange

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REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis

Alexander Vinnik, a 38 year old Russian man (L) suspected of running a money laundering operation, is escorted by a plain-clothes police officer to a court in Thessaloniki, Greece July 26, 2017.

A US jury indicted a Russian man on Wednesday as the operator of a digital currency exchange that handled more than $4 billion (£3 billion) of bitcoin, and has allegedly been used for money-laundering for people involved in crimes ranging from computer hacking to drug trafficking.

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Alexander Vinnik was arrested in a small beachside village in northern Greece on Tuesday, according to local authorities, following an investigation led by the US Justice Department along with several other federal agencies and task forces.

US 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.

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They alleged Vinnik and his firm "received" more than $4 billion in bitcoin over its lifetime and did substantial business in the United States without following appropriate protocols to protect against money laundering and other crimes.

BTC-e has been linked to criminal activity before. The Verge reports that it was a favourite for ransomware peddlers looking to cash out their ill-gotten earnings, with a recent Google survey finding at least 95% of cash-outs happened on the exchange.

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US authorities also linked him to the failure of Mt. Gox, a Japan-based bitcoin exchange that collapsed in 2014 after it was hacked and nearly $500 (£380 million) million-worth of the digital currency at then-current prices went missing. 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.

'BTC-e quickly became the virtual currency exchange of choice for criminals'

The US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is imposing a $110 million (£83 million) penalty on BTC-e, and a $12 million (£9.1 million) fine on Vinnick. In a filing, it said (emphasis ours):

Through their operation of BTC-e, Alexander Vinnik and other individuals occupying senior leadership positions within the virtual currency exchange attracted and maintained a customer base that consisted largely of criminals who desired to conceal proceeds from crimes such as ransomware, fraud, identity theft, tax refund fraud schemes, public corruption, and drug trafficking ... BTC-e quickly became the virtual currency exchange of choice for criminals looking to conduct illicit transactions or launder illicit proceeds, all of which BTC-e failed to report both to FinCEN and law enforcement."

"Just as new computer technologies continue to change the way we engage each other and experience the world, so too will criminals subvert these new technologies to serve their own nefarious purposes," said Brian Stretch, US Attorney for the Northern District of California (where Vinnick was indicted) in the statement.

Greek police described Vinnik as a "an internationally sought 'mastermind' of a crime organization."

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His arrest is the latest in a series of US operations against Russian cyber criminals in Europe. Last week, the US Justice Department moved to shut down the dark web marketplace AlphaBay.

The prosecutions also coincide with intensified scrutiny of Russian hackers after US intelligence officials determined that Russia interfered in the 2016 US presidential election using cyber warfare methods to help Donald Trump, something Moscow denies.

BTC-e was one of the oldest bitcoin exchanges

Bitcoin was the first digital currency to successfully use cryptography to keep transactions secure and pseudonymous, making conventional financial regulation difficult.

Over the years, law enforcement agencies around the world have been able to identify users behind pseudonymous wallets connected to illegal activities by tracking bitcoin movements, often with the help of crypto-currency experts.

While bitcoins can be bought and spent anonymously using digital wallets with unique addresses, transactions are recorded on a public ledger called blockchain, making it possible to follow the coins.

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Mt. Gox was one of the most prominent examples of how the lightly regulated cybercurrency market could burn investors, after an estimated $450 million (£342 million) worth of bitcoin and $27 million (£20 million) in hard cash vanished when it collapsed.

During his time in the digital currency market, US authorities allege Vinnik facilitated crimes including hacking, fraud, identity theft, tax refund fraud, public corruption, and drug trafficking.

BTC-e, which has been out of service for more than a day, attributed this to "unplanned maintenance." In a tweet on Wednesday after the arrest of Vinnik, BTC-e said it would restore service in the next 5-10 days.

The exchange is one of the oldest virtual currency platforms. It allows users to trade bitcoin pseudonymously against a variety of fiat and virtual currencies, and is known in crypto-currency markets as having relaxed standards for checking users' identity, and for not collaborating with law enforcement.

Until news of Vinnik's arrest, the identity of anyone behind it had been unknown.

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