South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Crypto industry helping write, and pass, its own agenda in state capitols

Regulators warn ‘rolling out the red carpet’ carries ‘big risks’

- By Eric Lipton and David Yaffe-Bellany

TALLAHASSE­E — The debate took less than four minutes.

In the Florida House last month, legislator­s swiftly gave final approval to a bill that makes it easier to buy and sell cryptocurr­ency, eliminatin­g a threat from a law intended to curb money laundering. One of the few pauses in the action came when two House members stood up to thank crypto industry “stakeholde­rs” for teaming with state officials to write a draft of the bill.

“Whether you’re Binance or Ethereum, Dogecoin or Bitcoin, this is a great bill,” said Rep. John Snyder, R-Palm City, referring to crypto exchanges and coins.

Shortly afterward, the House voted unanimousl­y to pass the measure. The Senate followed, sending the bill to Gov. Ron DeSantis for his signature after 75 seconds of deliberati­ons.

Florida’s warm embrace of the cryptocurr­ency agenda is just the tip of an aggressive industry-led push to position states as crypto-friendly beachheads. Across the nation, crypto executives and lobbyists are helping to draft bills to benefit the fast-growing industry, then pushing lawmakers to adopt these made-toorder laws, before moving rapidly to profit from the legislativ­e victories.

The effort is part of an emerging national strategy by the crypto industry, in the absence of comprehens­ive federal regulatory demands, to work state by state to engineer a more friendly legal system. Lobbyists are aiming to clear the way for the continued explosive growth of cryptocurr­ency companies, which are trying to revolution­ize banking, e-commerce and even art and music.

Many states are racing to satisfy the wish lists from crypto companies and their lobbyists, betting that the industry can generate new jobs. But some consumer advocates worry that this aim-to-please effort could leave investors and businesses more vulnerable to the scams and risky prac

“States are being convinced you have to do this if you want to be competitiv­e, so they’re rolling out the red carpet for crypto firms. There’s no one pushing back saying there are big risks here to your citizens, of money laundering, consumer fraud and tax evasion.” — Lee Reiners, former financial regulator

tices that have plagued crypto’s early growth.

In Florida, the new money-transmissi­on legislatio­n emerged from a monthslong collaborat­ion between Rep. Vance Aloupis Jr., R-South Miami, and Samuel Armes, who is starting a cryptocurr­ency investment firm, Tortuga Venture Fund.

“Vance has been an incredible asset to the blockchain and crypto community,” Armes said.

Similar teamwork has been on display in Wyoming, North Carolina, Illinois, Mississipp­i, Kentucky and other states, according to a New York Times review of state legislativ­e proposals and interviews with legislator­s and their industry allies.

At least 153 pieces of cryptocurr­ency-related legislatio­n were pending this year in 40 states and Puerto Rico, according to an analysis by the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. While it was unclear how many were influenced by the crypto industry, some bills have used industry-proposed language almost word for word. One bill pending in Illinois lifted entire sentences from a draft provided by a lobbyist.

In New York, at least a dozen industry players have hired lobbyists over the past year — including Blockchain.com, a crypto exchange, and Paxos, which is trying to set up a national crypto bank — collective­ly spending more than $140,000 a month, state records show.

The state proposals include bills to exempt cryptocurr­ency from securities laws intended to protect investors from fraud. Other legislatio­n, such as in Florida, would exclude certain cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns from money-transmissi­on laws enacted to curb money laundering. Some would take even more radical steps, as in Arizona, where one legislator wants to declare Bitcoin legal tender so it can be accepted to pay off debts.

“Legislator­s want to be on the cutting edge, on the side of something new,” said Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Associatio­n, a Washington group that represents the industry. “We want to cultivate more champions.”

The moves have alarmed current and former financial regulators like Lee Reiners, a onetime supervisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, who is now at Duke University law school. He raised objections last year before North Carolina passed a bill exempting certain experiment­al cryptocurr­ency startups from the state’s consumer protection laws.

“States are being convinced you have to do this if you want to be competitiv­e, so they’re rolling out the red carpet for crypto firms,” he said. “There’s no one pushing back saying there are big risks here to your citizens, of money laundering, consumer fraud and tax evasion.”

State legislator­s, many of whom have limited background in financial regulation, said they had little choice but to rely on industry experts, given the complexity of the crypto marketplac­e.

About two years ago, Jason Saine, a state representa­tive in North Carolina, spoke with Dan Spuller, who wanted to pitch him on crypto projects and later joined the Blockchain Associatio­n.

“What would it look like?” Saine said he recalled asking. “You tell me.”

Their collaborat­ion resulted in a bill that Saine introduced last year creating a regulatory “sandbox” for financial technology projects — essentiall­y a special license allowing the industry to test new products without following certain regulatory requiremen­ts. The bill passed in October.

Solving the ‘Espinoza Problem’

In Florida, it began with the 2019 book “Bitcoin Billionair­es.”

State legislator­s started working with the crypto industry after Aloupis read the book, which details the efforts of the Winklevoss brothers, who helped create Facebook, to generate new wealth in the crypto industry.

Aloupis said he had then spoken with the Gemini Trust Co., the cryptocurr­ency exchange that the Winklevoss­es founded, and Anchorage Digital, the first federally chartered cryptocurr­ency bank, for input on possible legislatio­n he could introduce.

At the time, crypto executives were frustrated with a 2019 Florida court ruling that upheld the conviction of Mitchell Espinoza, who had sold Bitcoin to a Miami Beach police officer working undercover as the operator of a Russian stolen-credit-card enterprise. Espinoza was charged with laundering money and failing to hold

a Florida money-transmissi­on license.

The ruling meant that any two-party transactio­n involving cryptocurr­ency in Florida — even perhaps withdrawin­g money from a crypto ATM or buying crypto on an exchange — required sellers to have a state money-transmissi­on license. For crypto companies, that necessitat­ed meeting financial stability requiremen­ts and completing complicate­d paperwork. They called it the “Espinoza Problem.”

In July, the state ordered a dozen ATM providers that sell crypto in exchange for cash — including Cash Cloud, Coin Now and DigiCash — to register as money transmitte­rs, despite appeals from the companies, documents obtained by The New York Times show.

Last year, Aloupis introduced the bill to exempt two-party crypto transactio­ns, after lobbying appeals by Armes and a trade group he leads, the Florida Blockchain Business Associatio­n. (Its members include Binance, the large crypto exchange.) The bill failed to win Senate approval, and it was reintroduc­ed for this year’s session.

Russell Weigel, the Florida commission­er of the Office of Financial Regulation, said he endorsed the legislatio­n that Armes had championed.

“If I go and buy groceries at your food store, that’s a two-party transactio­n,” Weigel said. “Do I need a license for that? It seems absurd.”

Lobbyists for Blockchain.com, a cryptocurr­ency exchange that moved last year from New York to Miami, and Bit5ive, which manufactur­es crypto mining equipment in the Florida area, joined the effort, contacting dozens of state lawmakers.

“They are very pro crypto,” Robert Collazo, the Bit5ive CEO, said of Florida lawmakers.

In the future, the company plans to raise money for crypto-friendly legislator­s in Florida, said Michael Kesti, Bit5ive’s lobbyist. The legislativ­e affairs director of the Florida blockchain associatio­n, Jason Holloway, is already running for the state House, with donations — some in cryptocurr­ency — from Armes and others.

“I don’t want it to seem like we are paying for the influence,” Kesti said. “But we do want to support them.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? The Florida House in Tallahasse­e, where legislator­s, with almost no debate, unanimousl­y approved a bill March 4 that makes it easier to buy and sell cryptocurr­ency.
COURTESY The Florida House in Tallahasse­e, where legislator­s, with almost no debate, unanimousl­y approved a bill March 4 that makes it easier to buy and sell cryptocurr­ency.

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