Business World

US court approves order for crypto firm Binance to pay $2.7B to CFTC

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WASHINGTON — A US court entered an order against crypto exchange Binance and its former chief executive officer, Changpeng Zhao, approving billions of dollars in fines for money laundering following a case brought by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the agency said on Monday.

Mr. Zhao will pay $150 million and Binance will pay $2.7 billion to the CFTC as a result, the agency said in a statement.

The US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois approved the previously announced settlement and entered a consent order of permanent injunction, civil monetary penalty, and equitable relief against Mr. Zhao and Binance, the CFTC said in its statement. The settlement was reached in late November.

The court imposed a $150 million civil monetary penalty personally against Mr. Zhao, and required Binance to disgorge $1.35 billion of ill-gotten transactio­n fees and pay a $1.35 billion penalty to the CFTC, according to the agency.

In November, Mr. Zhao stepped down and pleaded guilty to breaking US antimoney laundering laws as part of a settlement resolving a years-long probe into the world’s largest crypto exchange.

At the time, Binance said the resolution­s acknowledg­ed the company’s responsibi­lity “for historical, criminal compliance violations, and allow our company to turn the page.”

Binance broke US anti-money laundering and sanctions laws and failed to report more than 100,000 suspicious transactio­ns with organizati­ons the US described as terrorist groups, authoritie­s have said.

The exchange also failed to report transactio­ns with websites devoted to selling child sexual abuse material ≠–and was one of the largest recipients of ransomware proceeds, they added. —

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