Marin Independent Journal

Binance fined $4 billion, CEO pleads guilty to felony charge

- By Lindsay Whitehurst, Gene Johnson, Fatima Hussein and Eric Tucker

>> The U.S. government dealt a massive blow to Binance, the world's largest cryptocurr­ency exchange, which agreed to pay a roughly $4 billion settlement Tuesday as its founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty to a felony related to his failure to prevent money laundering on the platform.

Zhao stepped down as the company's chief executive and Binance admitted to violations of the Bank Secrecy Act and apparent violations of sanctions programs, including its failure to implement reporting programs for suspicious transactio­ns.

“Using new technology to break the law does not make you a disruptor, it makes you a criminal,” said U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, who called the settlement one of the largest corporate penalties in the nation's history.

As part of the settlement agreement, the U.S. Treasury said Binance will be subject to five years of monitoring and “significan­t compliance undertakin­gs, including to ensure Binance's complete exit from the United States.” Binance is a Cayman Islands limited liability company.

The cryptocurr­ency industry has been marred by scandals and market meltdowns.

Zhao was perhaps best known as the chief rival to Sam Bankman-Fried, the 31-year-old founder of the FTX, which was the second-largest crypto exchange

before it collapsed last November. BankmanFri­ed was convicted earlier this month of fraud for stealing at least $10 billion from customers and investors.

Zhao, meanwhile, pleaded guilty in a federal court in Seattle on Tuesday to one count of failure to maintain an effective anti-money-laundering program.

Magistrate Judge Brian A. Tsuchida questioned Zhao to make sure he understood the plea agreement, saying at one point: “You knew you didn't have controls in place.”

“Yes, your honor,” he replied.

Binance wrote in a statement that it made “misguided decisions” as it quickly grew to become the world's biggest crypto exchange, and said the settlement acknowledg­es its “responsibi­lity for historical, criminal compliance violations.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Binance

processed transition­s by illicit actors, “supporting activities from child sexual abuse, to illegal narcotics, to terrorism, across more than 100,000 transactio­ns.”

Binance did not file a single suspicious activity report on those transactio­ns, Yellen said, and the company allowed over 1.5 million virtual currency trades that violated U.S. sanctions — including ones involving Hamas' al-Qassam Brigades, al-Qaeda and other criminals.

The judge set Zhao's sentencing for Feb. 23, however it's likely to be delayed. He faces a possible guideline sentence range of up to 18 months.

One of his attorneys, Mark Bartlett, noted that Zhao had been aware of the investigat­ion since December 2020, and surrendere­d willingly even though the United Arab Emirates — where Zhao lives — has no extraditio­n treaty with the U.S.

“He decided to come

here and face the consequenc­es,” Bartlett said. “He's sitting here. He pled guilty.”

Zhao, who is married and has young children in the UAE, promised he would return to the U.S. for sentencing if allowed to stay there in the meantime.

“I want to take responsibi­lity and close this chapter in my life,” Zhao said. “I want to come back. Otherwise I wouldn't be here today.”

Zhao previously faced allegation­s of diverting customer funds, concealing the fact that the company was comminglin­g billions of dollars in investor assets and sending them to a third party that Zhao also owned.

Over the summer, Binance was accused of operating as an unregister­ed securities exchange and violating a slew of U.S. securities laws in a lawsuit from regulators. That case was similar to practices uncovered after the collapse of FTX.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao answers a question during a Zoom interview with the Associated Press on Nov. 16, 2021.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao answers a question during a Zoom interview with the Associated Press on Nov. 16, 2021.

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