The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has filed a lawsuit against Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange. Additionally, the CFTC’s suit also names Binance’s CEO and founder, Changpeng Zhao, for what the regulator said were violations of trading and derivatives rights.
As stated, the reason for the lawsuit is the deliberate avoidance of US law and the application of a “calculated strategy of regulatory arbitrage” that brought the company a commercial benefit.
Zhao, the Chinese billionaire who owns the crypto exchange, called the CFTC’s lawsuit unexpected and disappointing, Reuters reports.
Zhao said that after an initial review, the complaint appears to contain incomplete facts.
US prosecutors and civil investigators have been targeting crypto firms for years for illegal offerings and failing to follow the rules to prevent illegal activity. However, their actions towards the crypto industry have intensified in the last few months.
The CFTC alleges in the complaint that from July 2019 until today, Binance offered and executed derivatives transactions for US users violating United States laws.
The compliance program of the Binance platform was “ineffective”, so the company told employees and customers to bypass the compliance check, the CFTC said.
The CFTC also accused the company’s former director of compliance, Samuel Lim, of “aiding and abetting” Binance’s violations.
Hence, a spokesperson for Binance said the company would continue to “cooperate” with regulators.
South Korean police announced that Do Kwon, the fugitive head of the cryptocurrency network behind the $40 billion collapse of terraUSD and Luna tokens, has been arrested in Montenegro. The US Attorney’s Office charges Kwon with fraud.
This year, US regulators charged Kwon and his company, Terraform Labs, with allegedly organizing a multi-billion-dollar scheme involving crypto-assets. In September 2019, South Korean authorities issued a warrant for the arrest of Kwon.
According to an indictment released in New York District Court, Kwon faces securities fraud, commodities fraud and conspiracy charges. They allege to the US financial regulator that Kwon and Singapore-based Terraform Labs failed to convince the public of honest and truthful business practices. Moreover, this has led to major investors withdrawing their funds.
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