The charges were part of an intensifying effort by federal law enforcement agencies, in conjunction with European partners, to combat international cryptocurrency schemes and illegal transactions.
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The Justice Department said the Russian citizen, Anatoly Legkodymov, oversaw an exchange that knowingly enabled criminals “to profit from their wrongdoing, including ransomware and drug trafficking.”
WASHINGTON — A Russian citizen who ran a cryptocurrency exchange that federal prosecutors say transmitted at least $700 million in illicit funds has been arrested in Miami and charged with evading U.S. money-laundering safeguards, according to an indictment unsealed on Wednesday.
The Russian citizen, Anatoly Legkodymov, 40, oversaw the exchange based in Hong Kong, Bitzlato, which knowingly enabled criminals “to profit from their wrongdoing, including ransomware and drug trafficking,” Kenneth A. Polite Jr., the assistant attorney general of the Justice Department’s criminal division, said during a news conference on Wednesday.
The move was part of an intensifying effort by federal law enforcement agencies, in conjunction with European partners, to combat international cryptocurrency schemes and illegal transactions. In particular, they have sought to crack down on the activities of companies and people based in China and Russia operating in the unregulated corners of cyberspace known as the “darknet.”
If convicted, Mr. Legkodymov, who lives in Shenzhen, China, could face up to five years in prison. A senior law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said he was likely to face other charges, possibly connected to money laundering. It was not immediately clear who was representing Mr. Legkodymov, the company’s majority shareholder.
Encrypted internal company communications showed Mr. Legkodymov and other executives acknowledging that the exchange was trafficking in “dirty money,” including deposits made by drug dealers, said Breon Peace, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
In their chats, colleagues warned Mr. Legkodymov that the exchange’s customer base consisted of “addicts who buy drugs” and “drug traffickers,” a practice that could negatively affect the company’s long-term viability. In a message from May 29, 2019, according to court documents, Mr. Legkodymov told a fellow executive that many of Bitzlato’s users were “known to be crooks,” and admitted that many used false identity documents to register their accounts.
Investigators have also been able to track about $15 million obtained from ransomware attacks that were laundered through Bitzlato.
Mr. Legkodymov has been under surveillance since arriving at Kennedy International Airport in Queens last October, and continued to play a central role in overseeing the exchange until he was arrested in Florida on Tuesday, officials said. He was scheduled to appear in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida later Wednesday.
Lisa O. Monaco, the deputy attorney general, said Bitzlato’s operations were connected to the operations of the $5.2 billion Hydra Market, which accounted for an estimated 80 percent of all cryptocurrency transactions on the darknet before the department shut it down in April.
Prosecutors have described Hydra as “an online criminal marketplace” that enabled users in mainly Russian-speaking countries to anonymously buy and sell drugs, stolen financial information and fraudulent identification, and money-laundering services.
Source: nytimes.com