The Russian founding father of Bitzlato was sentenced to time served for facilitating over $700 million in unlawful crypto transactions.
Anatoly Legkodymov, a Russian co-founder of Hong Kong-based crypto alternate Bitzlato that processed over $700 million value of illicit crypto on the darkish net, was sentenced to 18 months however received’t serve extra time, as he’s already spent that interval in custody for working an unlicensed money-transmitting enterprise.
On July 18, Choose Eric Vitaliano in a New York District Court docket sentenced Anatoly Legkodymov after he pleaded responsible in December 2023 to facilitating transactions tied to the darkish net, together with the infamous Hydra Market, which was shut down in 2022.
Whereas prosecutors from the workplace of Brooklyn U.S. Legal professional Breon Peace argued that Legkodymov deserved at the very least 4 years in jail for “making a clearinghouse for soiled cash,” the decide factored within the harsh situations of the Metropolitan Detention Heart, the place Legkodymov had been held, calling it “a horrible place,” and referencing two current detainee murders as a cause towards extra jail time.
The U.S. Division of Justice claimed Bitzlato was a major supplier for darkish market purchasers and sellers, in addition to a “protected haven for ransomware criminals.” Below the plea settlement, Legkodymov dissolved Bitzlato and launched claims of over $23 million in seized belongings of the crypto alternate.
Bitzlato is believed to have been linked to Hydra Market, an internet illicit narcotic market that prosecutors say was linked to prison actions corresponding to cash laundering, drug trafficking, gross sales of illegally acquired monetary info, and fraudulent identities.
The U.S. Treasury’s FinCEN revealed that Bitzlato’s transactions had been closely linked to Binance, a cryptocurrency alternate whose founder Changpeng Zhao stepped down in late November 2023 as a part of a $4.3 billion settlement settlement with U.S. regulators. Afterward, Zhao was sentenced to 4 months in jail after pleading responsible to violating U.S. legal guidelines.