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Do Kwon faces new charges in addition to eight felonies: money laundering conspiracy

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Reprinted from jinse

01/03/2025·3M

Author: Turner Wright, CoinTelegraph; Compiler: Deng Tong, Golden Finance

The U.S. Attorney 's Office has filed an additional charge against Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon: a money laundering conspiracy after he was extradited to the United States from Montenegro.

On January 2, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York announced a superseding indictment in which U.S. Attorney Damian Williams accused Kwon of conspiring with others to launder money.

According to U.S. prosecutors, the Terraform co-founders facilitated more than $10,000 in transactions on the platform "knowing that certain financial transactions involved property that represented the proceeds of some form of illegal activity."

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Do Kwon's superseding indictment was released on January 2. Source: Courtlistener

The money laundering charges were part of a superseding indictment and were not originally filed as part of the eight-count indictment against Kwon in March 2023. Prosecutors filed the indictment under seal in May 2024, and a judge ordered it unsealed when Kwon appeared in court on January 2.

Kwon was allegedly involved in the collapse of the Terra ecosystem in 2022, and he was arrested and jailed in Montenegro in 2023 for using fake travel documents. U.S. and South Korean authorities filed competing petitions to extradite the Terraform co-founder, but Montenegrin authorities did not decide on his legal status until December 2024, when Kwon was handed over to U.S. officials.

Trial or plea deal?

The Terraform co-founder appeared in court on January 2 and pleaded not guilty to all charges and agreed to be detained. It is unclear whether U.S. authorities will consider a plea deal or intend to proceed with a criminal trial.

Kwon’s case is similar to that of former FTX CEO Sam “SBF” Bankman-Fried – another cryptocurrency executive who was subject to the jurisdiction of another country (the Bahamas) before being extradited to the United States. In SBF's case, his lawyers were able to argue that the campaign finance charge added to the superseding indictment should be dropped because it was not part of the extradition request.

Bankman-Fried was later convicted of seven felonies and sentenced to 25 years in prison, but he has appealed.

Another important industry figure - former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao - pleaded guilty to one charge and will serve four months in prison in 2024.

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