BITPRISMIA
A CrediX hacker moved half of the stolen $4.5 million in cryptocurrency to Tornado Cash, highlighting security challenges in decentralized finance (DeFi) and the difficulty in recovering mixed funds.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, is set to file post-trial motions by September 30 following a partial mistrial, while his legal defense fund has raised $5.3 million towards a $7 million goal.
The Ethereum Foundation has pledged $500,000 to support Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's legal defense after his conviction for unlicensed money transmission, sparking debate over the criminalization of open-source development.
The Ethereum Foundation has pledged to match up to $500,000 in community donations to support the legal defense of Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, amid ongoing legal challenges that could impact crypto privacy and DeFi regulations.
U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton issued a statement following the conviction of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm, emphasizing accountability for those exploiting emerging technologies for crime.
The content appears to be promotional material for a cryptocurrency token called Floppypepe ($FPPE), encouraging potential buyers to invest before it's too late.
Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm was found guilty on one count related to operating a crypto mixer, while the jury deadlocked on other charges, raising concerns about the legal implications for crypto developers.
Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm was found guilty on one charge related to unlicensed money-transmitting, while the jury was hung on two more serious charges, potentially reducing his maximum prison sentence from 40 years to 5 years.
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Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, was found guilty on unlicensed money transmission charges but not guilty on sanctions evasion, with a hung jury on money laundering, impacting crypto privacy and regulatory compliance.