Month
Before BitMEX Trial Set for March 30 Hayes
Pled Guilty Now Sam Reed Does Too
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
March 9 – Four executives of
the Bitcoin Mercantile
Exchange or BitMEX were
criminal defendants for
violations of the Bank Secrecy
Act. On February
24, with no notice, a guilty
plea.
Back on October 13, 2021 U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New
York Judge John G.
Koeltlt held a proceeding.
Inner City Press covered it,
below.
On February 24,
with no prior notice and not
included in the day's Calendar
on PACER, this: "Damian
Williams, the United States
Attorney for the Southern
District of New York,
announced that ARTHUR HAYES
and BENJAMIN DELO, founders
and executives of purportedly
“off-shore” cryptocurrency
derivatives exchange the
Bitcoin Mercantile Exchange or
“BitMEX,” pled guilty today to
violating the Bank Secrecy Act
(the “BSA”) by willfully
failing to establish,
implement, and maintain an
anti-money laundering (“AML”)
program at BitMEX. Under
the terms of their respective
plea agreements, HAYES and
DELO each agreed to separately
pay a $10 million criminal
fine representing pecuniary
gain derived from the
offense. HAYES and DELO
pled guilty today before U.S.
District Judge John G.
Koeltl."
On March 9,
SAMUEL REED, one of three
co-founders and a high-ranking
executive of purportedly
“off-shore” cryptocurrency
derivatives exchange the
Bitcoin Mercantile Exchange or
“BitMEX,” pled guilty today to
violating the Bank Secrecy Act
(the “BSA”) by willfully
failing to establish,
implement, and maintain an
anti-money laundering (“AML”)
program at BitMEX. Under
the terms of his plea
agreement, REED agreed to
separately pay a $10 million
criminal fine representing
pecuniary gain derived from
the offense. REED pled
guilty today before Chief U.S.
District Judge Laura T. Swain,
and will be sentenced by U.S.
District Judge John G.
Koeltl. The other two
founders of BitMEX, Arthur
Hayes and Benjamin Delo,
previously pled guilty to the
same offense in February 2022.
For those
wondering why not, even in the
absence of Judge Koeltl, plead
guilty before a Magistrate
Judge, that would require a
second step of Judge Koeltl
approving the Magistrate's
decision. So the plea was
before Chief Judge Swain as
Part I Judge; the sentencing
is set for July 13 before
Judge Koeltl.
We'll have
more on this.
Earlier:
The complaint says the
defendants "deliberately
failed to implement
BSA-Compliant AML and KYC
programs at BitMEX."
They have
demanded a bill of
particulars, and the
government has opposed
it. Judge Koeltl on
October 13 gave the defendants
until October 22 to reply to
DOJ's opposition.
On October 20,
after initially being stopped
from entering the SDNY
Magistrates Court (even while
the overflow room 15A was
locked), Inner City Press
managed to enter and witness
the telephone presentment of
defendant Gregory Dwyer, by
phone - from JFK airport, as
it happened.
Dwyer's lawyers
had written in request the
airport phone presentment so
as to avoid a night of
incarceration (to which others
on October 20 were confined,
in non white collar cases).
Magistrate Judge
Robert W. Lehrburger could be
heard speaking into the phone,
but the other side's responses
could not be, even in the
courtroom. But the conditions
of release were announced by
Judge Lehrburger, including
ultimately freedom to travel
to Bermuda.
On January
20, 2022 Judge Koeltl ruled,
among other things, that
Hayes' quote about bribing
officials in the Seychelles
with a coconut will not come
into evidence, as too
inflammatory. From the January
20 rulings, the prosecution
may be in trouble. For more,
in the run-up to the trial
that Inner City Press will
cover along with many other
now unblocked trials, see
Bloomberg by Chris Dolmetsch,
here,
and Law360 by Pete Brush
(paywall/7 day trial), here.
Here's the video from Taipei,
Hayes v. Nouriel Roubini, here
(from Minute 10: Andrew Neil
asks, How much are you paying
to bribe the Seychelles
authorities? Hayes says, "A
coconut.")
Soon after
the January 20 conference, the
defendants submitted for
signature a revised subpoena
to the CFTC, about the March
1, 2016 CFTC letter about
ICBIT and a June 26, 2018
meeting with Hayes and
Sullivan & Cromwell.
The trial is set
for March 30: "ORDER as to
Arthur Hayes, Benjamin Delo,
Samuel Reed. Trial in this
matter is adjourned to
Wednesday, March 30, 2022, at
9:00am (Jury Trial set for
3/30/2022 at 09:00 AM before
Judge John G. Koeltl.) (Signed
by Judge John G. Koeltl on
12/7/21)."
The case is
overall case is US v. Hayes,
et al., 20-cr-500 (Koeltl)
***
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