
US federal prosecutors have rebutted claims they suppressed evidence in their case against the co-founders of the crypto mixing service Samourai Wallet, arguing their disclosure of a conversation with Treasury Department staff was made within the required timeframes.Β
In a May 9 letter to a Manhattan federal court, prosecutors opposed a request for a hearing, claiming they handed over βall known substantive communicationsβ between them and the Treasuryβs Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) regarding Samourai βmonths in advance of pretrial motions and trial.β
βThe defendants will have seven months to make use of the information before trial,β they wrote. βNothing more is warranted.β
On May 5, Samourai co-founders Keonne Rodriguez and William Hill asked the court for a hearing, claiming that prosecutors were late to disclose that FinCEN representatives told them six months before they charged the pair that under the agencyβs guidance, the service βwould not qualify as a βMoney Services Businessβ requiring a FinCEN license.β
However, prosecutors still charged the pair in February 2024 with conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business and money laundering conspiracy, unsealing the charges and arresting the pair in April that year. They have both pleaded not guilty.
In their letter, prosecutors argued they βacted in good faithβ in disclosing the βcontents of this informal conversationβ between them and Kevin OβConnor, the chief of FinCENβs Virtual Assets and Emerging Technology Section in the Enforcement and Compliance Division, and Policy Division staffer Lorena Valente.
They claimed OβConnor and Valenteβs comments were βtheir individual, informal, and caveated opinionβ on whether Samourai would need to register as a money transmitter under FinCEN regulations.
FinCEN βdid not have a senseβ of broaching Samourai
The prosecutorβs letter noted that an email from one of the prosecutors summarizing the August 2023 call with FinCEN said that because Samourai doesnβt take custody of the crypto, it βwould strongly suggest that Samourai is NOT acting as an MSB [money services business].β
However, it noted FinCEN staff βdid not have a sense of what FinCEN would decide if this question were presented to their FinCEN policy committee.β
Samouraiβs lawyers had claimed that the call showed Rodriguez and Hill βwere not money transmitters under FinCENβs guidanceβ and that they βcould not possibly be prosecuted for not having a license.β
The Samourai co-founders had bid to dismiss the case in April, pointing to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blancheβs memo released that month saying the Justice Department wouldnβt prosecute crypto mixers for βunwitting violations of regulations.βΒ
In their letter, prosecutors addressed the memo, arguing the court βshould not considerβ it, as the memo states it βmay not be relied upon to create any right or benefitβ against the US or its departments.
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