US Prosecutors Drop Retrial in OpenSea Insider Trading Case

TheNewsCryptoPubblicato 2026-01-23Pubblicato ultima volta 2026-01-23

Introduzione

US prosecutors have dropped their case against Nathaniel Chastain, a former OpenSea employee, following an appeals court reversal of his 2023 conviction for wire fraud and money laundering. The court ruled that the non-public information he used to trade featured NFTs did not constitute “property” under federal fraud statutes. Chastain had already served part of his sentence, including prison time, and agreed to forfeit approximately $47,000 in Ethereum. The dismissal, expected next month, marks a significant legal outcome regarding the application of insider trading laws to NFTs and digital assets.

The US DOJ has announced its intention to dismiss the case against Nathaniel Chastain, a former official at the online marketplace for digital trading cards known as OpenSea, over an insider trading case against the defendant, whose deferred prosecution plea bargain is set to expire the following month.

Charges filed against Chastain stemmed from a case initiated by federal prosecutors after his 2023 conviction for wire fraud and money laundering offenses. Allegations suggested Chastain made use of his position to learn information beforehand about the non-fungible assets chosen to appear on OpenSea’s homepage and purchase them to make a later profit from selling them.

A federal appeals court threw out Chastain’s conviction in July for improper jury instructions on what constitutes “property” under the federal wire fraud statutes. The court ruled that non-public information of which NFTs would be featured (and data not shown to hold commercial value to OpenSea itself) did not meet the statutory definition of property subject to fraud charges.

Following that ruling, prosecutors said earlier in the week that they would not seek to retry him. The motion to dismiss came after Chastain spent part of his original sentence, including time in prison, and agreed not to contest the forfeiture of about 15.98 ETH, worth around US $47,000, linked to his NFT trading.

Deferred Prosecution Agreement

Within the agreement, the government has agreed to drop the charges upon compliance with the terms and conditions outlined in the agreement. The dismissal of the charges is expected in the coming month. The government argued that the agreement and the subsequent dismissal of charges are in the interest of justice by citing the partial service of Chastain’s sentence and the forfeitures.

The case was significant as it was one of the initial attempts to apply insider trading cases to NFTs and other digital assets under existing federal fraud statutes. It should also be pointed out that in a previous case involving NFT assets, it was overturned by an appeals court due to the legal complexities involved.

The DOJ’s decision to decline the trial of the case of an insider trading prosecution of the former OpenSea executive was due to the dismissal of the deferred prosecution agreement. There is no doubt that the court’s reversal was key to shaping the issue of the enforcement of the digital asset space under the definitions of the relevant statute.

Highlighted Crypto News:

South Korean Prosecutors Probe $49M Bitcoin Loss From State Custody

TagsNFTOpenSea

Domande pertinenti

QWhy did the US DOJ decide to dismiss the case against Nathaniel Chastain?

AThe DOJ decided to dismiss the case following an appeals court reversal of his conviction due to improper jury instructions, and because Chastain had already served part of his sentence and complied with forfeiture terms in a deferred prosecution agreement.

QWhat was the original conviction of Nathaniel Chastain based on?

AHe was originally convicted in 2023 for wire fraud and money laundering related to using insider information about which NFTs would be featured on OpenSea's homepage to purchase them for personal profit.

QWhat was the key legal reason the appeals court overturned Chastain's conviction?

AThe appeals court ruled that the non-public information about NFT features did not constitute 'property' under federal wire fraud statutes, as it held no commercial value to OpenSea itself.

QWhat were the terms Chastain agreed to in the deferred prosecution agreement?

AChastain agreed not to contest the forfeiture of approximately 15.98 ETH (worth about $47,000) linked to his NFT trading, and the government agreed to drop charges upon his compliance.

QWhy was this case significant for the digital asset industry?

AIt was one of the first attempts to apply insider trading laws to NFTs under existing federal fraud statutes, and its reversal highlights the legal complexities in enforcing such cases in the digital asset space.

Letture associate

From Theft to Re-entry: How Was $292 Million "Laundered"?

A sophisticated crypto laundering operation was executed following the $292 million hack of Kelp DAO on April 18. The attack, attributed to the North Korean Lazarus group, began with anonymous infrastructure preparation using Tornado Cash to fund wallets untraceably. The hacker exploited a vulnerability in Kelp’s cross-chain bridge, stealing 116,500 rsETH. To avoid crashing the market, the attacker used Aave and Compound as laundering tools—depositing the stolen rsETH as collateral to borrow $190 million in clean, liquid ETH. This move triggered a bank run on Aave, causing an $8 billion drop in TVL. After consolidating funds, the attacker fragmented them across hundreds of wallets to evade detection. A major breakpoint was THORChain, where over $460 million in volume—30 times its usual activity—was processed in 24 hours, converting ETH into Bitcoin. This shift to Bitcoin’s UTXO model exponentially increased tracing complexity by shattering funds into countless untraceable fragments. The final destination was Tron-based USDT, the primary channel for illicit crypto flows. From there, funds were cashed out via OTC brokers in China and Southeast Asia, using unlicensed underground banks and UnionPay networks outside Western sanctions scope. Ultimately, the laundered money supports North Korea’s weapons programs, which rely heavily on crypto hacking for foreign currency. The incident underscores structural challenges in DeFi: its openness, composability, and lack of central control make such laundering not just possible, but inherently difficult to prevent.

marsbit3 h fa

From Theft to Re-entry: How Was $292 Million "Laundered"?

marsbit3 h fa

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片