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  • Department of Energy discontinues crypto mining survey following a settlement agreement

    Fintech

    On March 1, a cryptocurrency company (plaintiff) and the U.S. Department of Energy submitted a settlement agreement to the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas to discontinue an emergency crypto mining survey once approved by the Office of Management and Budget.

    According to the settlement agreement, the Department of Energy initiated an emergency three-year collection of a Cryptocurrency Mining Facilities Survey in January, which the plaintiff claimed did not comply with various statutory and regulatory requirements for the emergency collection of information. Following the court’s approval of the plaintiff’s temporary restraining order, which protected plaintiffs from completing the survey issued by the Department of Energy and protected any information they may have already submitted, the Department of Energy discontinued its emergency collection, and said it will proceed through notice-and-comment procedures for approval of any collection of information covering such data. As a result of the discontinuation of the emergency collection request, no entity or person is required to respond to the survey.

    As part of the settlement agreement, the Department of Energy will destroy any information it had already received from survey responses. In addition to a $2,199.45 payment for the plaintiffs’ litigation expenses, the Department of Energy also agreed to publish a new Federal Register notice of a proposed collection of information and withdraw its original notice. 

    Fintech Department of Energy Cryptocurrency Digital Assets Settlement Courts Bitcoin

  • Fed finds CEO engaged in crypto “pig butchering” scam which led to bank failure

    On February 7, the Federal Reserve issued an evaluation report, as required by the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (where a loss to the deposit insurance fund is considered material), on a recently failed bank; the Fed concluded the bank failed due to alleged fraudulent activity by the bank’s CEO. In particular, the Fed found that the CEO initiated a series of wire transfers over the course of three months totaling about $47.1 million of the bank’s money as part of a cryptocurrency scam known as “pig butchering.” According to a FinCEN alert, “pig butchering” occurs when a scammer convinces its victims to invest in purportedly legitimate cryptocurrency investments but then steals the victim’s money.

    The Fed found that the bank’s employees neglected to follow proper internal controls and policies that could have “prevented or detected” the alleged fraudulent activity, attributing the failure to a reluctance to challenge the CEO given the CEO’s “dominant role in the bank and prominent role in the community.” Specifically, the employees did not comply with the bank’s BSA/AML policy or file suspicious activity reports as outlined under the policy. As a result, the Fed recommended (i) increasing the awareness among state member banks of cryptocurrency scams; and (ii) providing training to examiners on cryptocurrency scams.

    Bank Regulatory Federal Issues Cryptocurrency FinCEN Federal Reserve Bank Secrecy Act Anti-Money Laundering

  • SEC charges alleged hedge fund with defrauding $1.2 million from investors

    Financial Crimes

    On February 2, the SEC issued a complaint which charged a company for allegedly raising $1.2 million from 15 investors through an offer and sale of fraudulent securities for a hedge fund. The company raised this money from 2017-2018 and offered securities that would be used to form a hedge fund and invest in crypto-assets using “specific” investment strategies. (The company ostensibly managed the hedge fund, but the hedge fund never appeared to be created.) 

    The company made several misrepresentations which the SEC claimed violated Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These alleged misrepresentations included the founder’s background and education, the demand for and size of the proposed hedge fund, and the investment scheme to grow a return for investors. The investors were given an investor pitch deck that put forth the hedge fund’s terms, investment strategy, and management team. Then, the investors gave a minimum investment of $1 million; however, the hedge fund investors were offered the opportunity to invest for less than $1 million through a separate entity.  

    Through this, the SEC alleged that the company violated the federal securities law and put forth two claims for relief. The SEC permanently enjoins the company from issuing, buying, offering, or selling any security, including crypto-assets. No civil monetary judgment has been offered. 

    Financial Crimes SEC Securities Cryptocurrency Enforcement

  • Texas resolves securities fraud case with decentralized finance lending platform

    State Issues

    Recently, a decentralized finance crypto lending platform and its owners (respondents) entered into a settlement agreement with a Texas regulatory agency, resolving an emergency cease-and-desist action brought in June 2023. The Texas State Securities Board alleged that respondents committed securities fraud in connection with the offers and sales of investments, falsely denied the platform’s impending bankruptcy, and “secretly” transferred customer funds to a crypto exchange, as well as offered unregistered securities. Under the terms of the settlement, respondents have agreed to, among other things, (i) inform clients of its plan for asset return within seven days of the settlement and provide a seven-day window for clients to withdraw assets through the app; (ii) continue to provide customer support to prior customers; (iii) pay an administrative fine; and (iv) cease-and-desist from selling unregistered securities in the state without admitting or denying the allegations. Texas also agreed to dismiss its emergency cease-and-desist order as part of the settlement.  

    State Issues Texas Enforcement Cryptocurrency Lending

  • FINRA report covers new topics including cryptoassets

    Securities

    On January 9, FINRA released a report on regulatory oversight titled “2024 FINRA Annual Regulatory Oversight Report.” The report integrates FINRA’s regulatory operations programs as a source of information for firms to strengthen their compliance standards. The report outlines new topics, including Crypto Asset Developments, OTC Quotations in Fixed Income Securities, Advertised Volume, and the Market Access Rule.

    With respect to Crypto Asset Developments, the report focuses on surveillance themes and effective practices including best practices for due diligence. On the topic of OTC Quotations in Fixed Income Securities, the report highlights amendments to the rules governing publication of quotations by broker-dealers in a quotation medium. Further, with respect to Advertised Volume, FINRA highlights Rule 5210, which prohibits member firms from publishing transactions that are not believed to be a bona fide purchase or sale of a security.

    The report notes that the SEC’s Market Access Rule prohibits firms that provide market access from “jeopardiz[ing] their own financial condition.” Findings include insufficient controls and failure to consider additional data. Effective practices include pre-trade fixed-income financial controls and soft blocks, among others. The report also covers several other topics including Cybersecurity, AML Fraud and Sanctions, Reg BI and Form CRS, and Consolidated Audit Trail.

    Securities FINRA Cryptocurrency Broker-Dealer

  • NYDFS orders digital currency trading company to pay $8 million

    State Issues

    On January 12, NYDFS announced that it had entered into a consent order with a digital currency trading company after an investigation that found the company responsible for compliance failures that violated NYDFS’s virtual currency and cybersecurity regulations, leaving the company vulnerable to illicit activity and cybersecurity threats.  

    NYDFS found that the company failed to meet its compliance obligations due to (i) deficiencies in the company’s AML program; (ii) failure to file compliant suspicious activity reports; (iii) failure to conduct required OFAC screening; and (iv) failure to maintain an adequate cybersecurity program. In connection with the settlement, the company will surrender its BitLicense, the license required to be held by any company conducting virtual currency business in New York state and pay an $8 million penalty. 

    State Issues NYDFS Digital Currency Cyber Risk & Data Security Bank Secrecy Act Anti-Money Laundering Cryptocurrency OFAC Enforcement

  • SEC approves Bitcoin use in 11 exchange-traded products

    Securities

    On January 10, the SEC issued an order approving 11 exchange-traded products (ETPs) holding Bitcoin to be publicly traded. According to the order, the SEC found that the proposed ETPs are consistent with the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, specifically Section 6(b)(5), which requires that the rules prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices and protect investors and the public interest. The SEC also found that the 11 proposed ETPs are consistent with Section 11A(a)(1)(C)(iii) which states that it is in the public interest to make the ETPs available to brokers, dealers, and investors. The order goes into further detail and outlines how the two subsections of the ‘34 Act are applied.

    As previously covered on InfoBytes, the SEC originally denied a similar application from a company but had to reexamine that company’s application following the D.C. Court of Appeals overturning of the SEC’s initial rejection. The appellate court alleged the SEC “acted arbitrarily and capriciously by denying the listing of [the company]’s proposed bitcoin ET[F],” and members of Congress also urged the Chair of the SEC to approve Bitcoin’s use within ETPs in a September 2023 letter (covered in InfoBytes here).

    Securities Exchange-Traded Funds Bitcoin Cryptocurrency Securities Exchange Act

  • SEC charges DAO for unregistered sale of crypto smart yield bonds

    Securities

    On December 22, 2023, the SEC announced a settlement with a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) and a second settlement with its founders. The SEC alleged that the DAO failed to register with the Commission for its offering and sale of structured crypto-asset securities. The SEC additionally charged the organization for operating certain pools as unregistered investment companies. According to the SEC, the organization compared its structured crypto-asset securities to asset-backed securities and marketed them to the public. Furthermore, investors could acquire “senior” or “junior” interest which could be pooled and used to generate returns. The orders state that the structured crypto-asset securities attracted significant investments, totaling over $509 million, with fees paid to the organization by investors based on investment size and chosen yield.

    Securities Enforcement Cryptocurrency

  • DFPI opens comment period for the Digital Financial Assets Law

    On November 20, DFPI announced it is seeking public comment before it begins its formal rulemaking process on its Digital Financial Assets Law (DFAL), which was enacted on October 13. As previously covered by InfoBytes, DFAL created a licensing requirement for businesses engaging in digital financial asset business activity and is effective on July 1, 2025.

    For comments that recommend rules, DFPI encourages comments that “propose specific rule language and provide an estimate, with justification, of the potential economic impact on business and individuals that would be affected by the language.” Additionally, DFPI requests metrics, applicable information about economic impacts, or quantitative analysis to support comments. Among other topics, DFPI especially asks for comments related to (i) application fees and potential fee adjustments based on application complexity; (ii) surety bond or trust account factors; (iii) if capital minimums should vary by the type of activity requiring licensure; and (iv) its stablecoin approval process. 

    Comments must be received by January 12, 2024. On January 8, 2024, DFPI will host a Virtual Informal Listening Session with stakeholders to discuss feedback on this informal invitation for comments.

    Licensing State Issues Agency Rule-Making & Guidance DFPI California State Legislation Digital Assets Cryptocurrency

  • DFPI shares trends in consumer crypto complaints

    State Issues

    DFPI recently published a report on consumer crypto-related complaints collected through its new online complaint portal. According to the third-quarter 2023 CSO report, some of the most common complaints include (i) consumers being scammed into transferring digital assets from a legitimate crypto account to a fraudulent platform; (ii) consumers losing access to funds after transferring to an unknown wallet; (iii) consumers who invest in sham crypto investments by sending US dollars to a scammer’s platform, wallet, or bank; (iv) consumers making additional investments to scammers after receiving the first and only return; (v) consumers with concerns regarding their account activity on legitimate crypto platforms; and (vi) consumers approached by scammers via text message and social media. DFPI shared tips on how consumers can protect themselves against scams as well, noting that “[i]f it seems too good to be true, it probably is.” 

    State Issues Cryptocurrency DFPI California Digital Assets

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