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The Crypto Times

08/06 20:20

Tornado Cash Co-founder Convicted as Crypto Legal Stakes Rise

A Manhattan jury found Roman Storm, co-founder of the crypto privacy tool Tornado Cash, guilty of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. The verdict, delivered in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, has ignited a debate within the crypto community about the future of open-source development and digital privacy.

The jury could not reach a consensus on the more severe charges of money laundering and sanctions violations, according to Inner City Press. The case which is being handled by Judge Katherine Polk Failla, has turned into a point of contention in the escalating conflict between cryptocurrency innovation and regulatory scrutiny.

Storm faced various criminal charges in 2023 concerning Tornado Cash activities, a crypto privacy tool. Prosecutors alleged that more than $1 billion had been laundered under his alleged facilitation, among the funds being that for North Korea’s Lazarus Group. 

They argued that Storm knowingly built and profited from a system criminals exploited. They further submitted that he was aware of the North Korean hackers but still allowed the tool to operate.

Legal Complexity Meets Blockchain Innovation

Storm’s defense claimed he never intended Tornado Cash to aid illegal activity. When he learned North Koreans were involved, they “dropped F-bombs,” not champagne. Besides, jurors seemed overwhelmed by the technicalities. 

They were curious about whether Storm had to engage with foreign authorities and how OFAC sanctions relate to blockchain wallets. These inquiries highlighted the legal system’s ongoing challenges in adapting to decentralized technology.

Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum’s co-founder, backed Storm. “It would violate basic honor… In Ethereum we protect our own,” he said. Moreover, the DeFi Education Fund defended Storm’s right to build open-source software, stating such developers “do not exercise control or custody over user assets.”

You created Tornado in significant part because of my suggestion that it is something worth building.

It would violate basic honor for me to do that, and then fail to support you in your hour of need.

In Ethereum we protect our own, and uphold our honor.

Milady

— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) January 22, 2025

By all means, this case has the possibility of changing the judiciary’s perspective on open-source crypto developers. It sets such a dangerous situation whereby merely writing code could be criminalized. The outcomes are not only on Storm, but they could have an effect on digital privacy, blockchain innovation, and user rights.

Also Read: India’s ED Seizes ₹42.8 Cr in Chirag Tomar Crypto Fraud

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