In $3.6
Billion Crypto Laundering Case Bond
Conditions Set for Lichtenstein &
Morgan
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Maxwell
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BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
Vlog
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Feb 8 โ After Ilya
โDutchโ
Lichtenstein
and his wife,
Heather Morgan
were arrested in lower
Manhattan for allegedly trying
to launder $3.6 billon in
crypto-currency linked to the
hack of Bitfinex, they
appeared in before Magistrate
Judge Debra C. Freeman of the
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York.
After a
lengthy proceeding, conditions
of release were set: $5
million and $3 million bond,
respectively. But they will
not be released until that is
signed and other conditions
met. And the US said it will
appeal - in DC, defense
counsel told Inner City Press.
Then, vlog.
Inner City
Press live tweeted it, thread
here:
All rise! Heather
Morgan is in a white hoodie;
Lichtenstein in grey V-neck.
Judge Freeman
asks if the press is observing
social distancing. "I am
responsible for safety in this
courtroom.... Apologies for
the delay."
Two separate Mag
Court docket numbers.
AUSA: Both
defendants were arrested this
morning at approximately 7 am.
Judge Freeman:
Mr. Lichtenstein is a Russian
citizen - has consular
notification been made? AUSA:
It has.
Judge Freeman: Is
that required where it's a
dual citizen, as here? AUSA:
Yes. Judge Freeman: Mr.
Lichtenstein - is that how you
say it? If you do not hear
from someone from the
consulate...
Judge Freeman:
The charges against you in the
District of Columbia are money
laundering and 18 USC 371,
which makes it a crime to
defraud the US. You have the
right to a [removal] hearing,
an identity hearing. Counsel,
do you need something? I want
to be heard
[In the interim,
here's the DDC "Statement
of facts"
And here,
via YouTube, is Heather Morgan
a/k/a Razzlekhan
Assistant US
Attorney: We are asking for
detention. The case is
involves the theft of bitcoin
now worth $5 billion. The
funds were found in accounts,
with private keys for a wallet
containing bitcoin worth $3.6
billion. Lichtenstein had log
in info for accounts
AUSA: Bitcoin is
not like cash. With complex
analysis you can find where it
comes from - in this case, the
2016 hack. Their guidelines
are over the 20 year statutory
maximum. They have the means
to flee - $330 million have
yet to be found.
AUSA:
Lichtenstein had a computer
folder called "Persona," with
ID for different people. He
had another file called
"Passport_Ideas." They had 50
electronic devices, in a bag
labeled "burner phones."
AUSA:
Lichtenstein was born in
Russia. They were in Ukraine
in 2019. Morgan, from 2011 to
2013, lived in Hong Kong and
Egypt. Morgan has been
studying Russian, and speaks
Korean.
[Morgan leans
over and whispers to her
Cahill Gordan lawyer]
Judge
Freeman: Did the use use
aliases? AUSA: Yes. They used
false names to open accounts.
Lichtenstein's
lawyer: He fled Russia to
escape religious persecution.
It is unremarkable that his
wife has been learning
Russian. He grew up in
Chicago.
Lichtenstein's
lawyer: They have been
planning a family. I'll get to
there. Morgan is a journalist
and runs a sales consulting
company that employs 30
freelance writers. Her father
works for US government
agencies.
Defense
lawyer: Mr. Morgan has a
fibroid removed from her
breasts. She's at risk of
COVID. They are going IVF. I
have told the government, not
the SDNY but Main Justice,
about her surgery since
January. I was surprised to
learn of her arrest this
morning.
Defense lawyer: They have been
aware of this investigation
since Nov, from a service
provider which received a
subpoena. There was a search
warrant at their apartment,
not five minutes from here.
That where this evidence is
from.
Defense
lawyer: So what changed? Only
Treasury had access to this
money now. On the missing
money, there is nothing that
connects our client to it.
They claim the proof is
strong. On Ms. Morgan, they
have almost nothing. Receiving
is not conducting a
transaction
Defense
lawyer: Ms. Morgan is several
steps removed from the S.U.A.
Judge Freeman: What is SUA?
Defense lawyer: Specified
Unlawful Activity, sorry, your
Honor...
[Cites Para
37(f) "although MORGAN advised
representatives from VCE 7
that SalesFolk received
virtual currency from some of
her customers, investigators
were not able to locate
anything on the SalesFolk
website referencing accepting
or dealing with
cryptocurrency"
Defense lawyer: I
have traveled to more
countries than Mr.
Lichtenstein in the past 10
years. Am I a flight
risk? Our defense would
be hamstrung if they are held
in. Before trial it could be
several months to a year.
Judge
Freeman: Today I will only
decide if they should remain
in detention to be transported
to DC. Defense lawyer: They're
in NY. It's a train ride. We
have co-signers...
[Lichtenstein
hand note to lawyer who's
talking] ... Ms. Morgan's
parents.
AUSA: In
late January, the government
manage to decrypt their
accounts, with $3.6 billion of
bitcoin inside.
[Now Lichtenstein
is whispering to his lawyer]
Judge Freeman: Everyone knows
the government had tools. Why
didn't they flee? This was not
just a passcode
AUSA: When
the search was executed, we
took their passports. So
fleeing was at least delayed.
But evidence has been
discovered in the last week.
Judge Freeman: It's not hard
bringing someone back from
Illinois. AUSA: There is no
extradition from Russia.
AUSA: He
gain citizenship in 2002.
Defense lawyer: He came at
six. They were refugees. Judge
Freeman: Ms. Morgan told
pre-trial her husband became a
citizen as a political
refugee. Why does he have a
Russian passport? Defense
lawyer: He's never traveled
there.
AUSA: His
Russian passport expires in
2029. Judge Freeman: When was
it issued? AUSA: 2019. Defense
lawyer: If he ever intended to
return to his homeland, he
needed it.
AUSA: The
Passport_Ideas file has info
on how to obtain one on the
Dark Web. [Lichtenstein
whispering with lawyer again]
AUSA: The
apartment was equally hers,
with the bag labeled "burner
phones." Judge Freeman: How
does that show risk of flight?
Judge
Freeman: Is there a date for
the appearance in DC? AUSA:
No. Judge Freeman: It is not
necessarily the case that the
decision on one should follow
the other. Pre Trial Services
recommends detention of both,
on risk of flight. Inner City
Press @innercitypress ยท
Judge Freeman:
Here's what I'm thinking, on
flight risk the standard is a
preponderance of the evidence.
It's clear that the defendants
have means, have traveled, and
that the charges are serious.
I'm troubled by the
Cloud-based account about
passports Inner City Press
@innercitypress
Defense
lawyer: I heard that the false
names were to open financial
accounts, not to help flee --
Judge Freeman: On the other
side, they have stayed put,
even after the search
warrants. Ms. Morgan has
doctor's appointment she does
not want to miss.
[Note,
#MoneyTalks: earlier today
before Judge Freeman a 31-year
old New Yorker was remanded to
the MDC or Essex for...
failure to report to
probation, here]
Judge Freeman:
Ms. Morgan's parents, are they
here? [They stand up] Judge
Freeman: Would you post your
own home, to lose it to the
government if she didn't know
up in court? Do you have more
than one home? AUSA: We still
ask for detention. They have
enough bitcoin to buy a new
house.
Defense lawyer:
Mr. Lichtenstein's parents
live in Illinois. They are
willing to post their home.
Judge Freeman: I got a call in
Chambers, I was the only one
there, and defense counsel
called and I picked up the
phone and he said he was
surprised they were arrested.
I'm putting that on the
record. I'd like to hear from
both parties on the size of a
bond
AUSA: In
DDC they don't request
monetary bond. They would like
a stay in order to appeal.
Judge Freeman: That wouldn't
be necessary, because it would
take time to post the homes.
Defense lawyer:
Her parents are here! She has
surgery tomorrow!
Judge
Freeman: I am finding in your
favor, that condition of
release can be set.
AUSA: $100 million, your
Honor. Defense lawyer: I've
never heard that in 22 years.
Judge Freeman: It does seem a
bit much.
AUSA: Mr.
Lichtenstein has an account --
Defense lawyer: We're talking
about the co-signers. Judge
Freeman: I'm going to do this
separately. Mr. Lichtenstein,
$5 million bond, parents' home
posted. 5 co-signers. Home
detention with GPS.
[Now
Lichtenstein is whispering to
seated lawyer Enzer, the
author]
Defense lawyer:
Could he get a flip phone, to
communicate with us? Could he
come to our office on Old
Slip, near their apartment?
Judge Freeman:
These accounts, are they
crypto accounts? Defense
lawyer: Cash. Currency. Judge
Freeman: Can we control how
much he can access?
Judge Freeman: I don't think
it can happen so lightening
fast. Maybe in 24 hours. So I
don't have to issue a stay to
allow for the appeal. For Ms.
Lichtenstein [that is, Ms.
Morgan] Same on co-signers,
all the same but the bond is
$3 million.
Defense lawyer:
Her parents are here and
you've taken the measure of
them. [Really?] Judge Freeman:
OK, just the parents for Ms.
Morgan. Defense: And Mr.
Lichtenstein? Judge Freeman:
Still five co-signers. Come
back if there's a problem.
Judge
Freeman (to defendants) - Do
not prove me wrong and make me
sign a warrant. And Ms.
Morgan's parents, it is
important that she appear. OK.
On the medical front,
appointments after conditions
are satisfied. Follow up on
surgery - any concern there?
Defense lawyer:
There has been some pain. She
needs to make sure there is no
infection.
Judge
Freeman: I suspect if there is
a slight delay, there are
people in the facility, I'll
do a medical attention form.
I'm going to hand down to
defense counsel some forms
Judge
Freeman: I'm going to add some
conditions after speaking with
Pre-Trial Services. Defendants
to pay for all or part of
location monitoring...
Now they are led
away by the Marshals.
The substantive case, in DDC,
is US v. Lichtenstein, et al.,
22-mj-22 (RMM)
The SDNY cases:
US v. Lichtenstein, 22-mj-1279
(Freeman) and US v. Morgan,
22-mj-1280 (Freeman)
***
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