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Feds deny late disclosure of proof in Samourai Pockets case


US federal prosecutors have rebutted claims they suppressed proof of their case towards the co-founders of the crypto mixing service Samourai Pockets, arguing their disclosure of a dialog with Treasury Division employees was made inside the required timeframes. 

In a Might 9 letter to a Manhattan federal court docket, prosecutors opposed a request for a listening to, claiming they handed over “all identified substantive communications” between them and the Treasury’s Monetary Crimes Enforcement Community (FinCEN) relating to Samourai “months upfront of pretrial motions and trial.”

“The defendants could have seven months to utilize the knowledge earlier than trial,” they wrote. “Nothing extra is warranted.”

On Might 5, Samourai co-founders Keonne Rodriguez and William Hill requested the court docket for a listening to, claiming that prosecutors had been late to reveal that FinCEN representatives informed them six months earlier than they charged the pair that below the company’s steerage, the service “wouldn’t qualify as a ‘Cash Companies Enterprise’ requiring a FinCEN license.”

Nevertheless, prosecutors nonetheless charged the pair in February 2024 with conspiracy to function an unlicensed cash transmitting enterprise and cash laundering conspiracy, unsealing the fees and arresting the pair in April that 12 months. They’ve each pleaded not responsible.

Of their letter, prosecutors argued they “acted in good religion” in disclosing the “contents of this casual dialog” between them and Kevin O’Connor, the chief of FinCEN’s Digital Belongings and Rising Know-how Part within the Enforcement and Compliance Division, and Coverage Division staffer Lorena Valente.

A highlighted excerpt of the prosecutors’ letter arguing that they disclosed a dialogue with FinCEN on time and the dialogue was an “casual dialog.” Supply: PACER

They claimed O’Connor and Valente’s feedback had been “their particular person, casual, and caveated opinion” on whether or not Samourai would wish to register as a cash transmitter below FinCEN rules.

FinCEN “didn’t have a way” of broaching Samourai

The prosecutor’s letter famous that an electronic mail from one of many prosecutors summarizing the August 2023 name with FinCEN stated that as a result of Samourai doesn’t take custody of the crypto, it “would strongly counsel that Samourai is NOT appearing as an MSB [money services business].”

Nevertheless, it famous FinCEN employees “didn’t have a way of what FinCEN would determine if this query had been offered to their FinCEN coverage committee.”

An excerpt of an electronic mail from prosecutor Andrew Chan stated FinCEN “didn’t have a way” of what it could determine on Samourai. Supply: CourtListener

Samourai’s legal professionals had claimed that the decision confirmed Rodriguez and Hill “weren’t cash transmitters below FinCEN’s steerage” and that they “couldn’t probably be prosecuted for not having a license.”

The Samourai co-founders had bid to dismiss the case in April, pointing to Deputy Lawyer Common Todd Blanche’s memo launched that month saying the Justice Division wouldn’t prosecute crypto mixers for “unwitting violations of rules.” 

Of their letter, prosecutors addressed the memo, arguing the court docket “mustn’t contemplate” it, because the memo states it “will not be relied upon to create any proper or profit” towards the US or its departments.

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