Binance Moved $400 Million From US Partner To Firm Managed By CEO Zhao (reuters.com) 17
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Global cryptocurrency exchange Binance had secret access to a bank account belonging to its purportedly independent U.S. partner and transferred large sums of money from the account to a trading firm managed by Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, banking records and company messages show. Over the first three months of 2021, more than $400 million flowed from the Binance.US account at California-based Silvergate Bank to this trading firm, Merit Peak Ltd, according to records for the quarter, which were reviewed by Reuters. The Binance.US account was registered under the name of BAM Trading, the U.S. exchange's operating company, according to the records. Company messages show the transfers to Merit Peak began in late 2020.
Reuters couldn't determine the reason for the transfers or whether any of the money belonged to Binance.US customers. The exchange's public terms of use at the time said its customers' dollar deposits were held at Silvergate and a Nevada-based custodian firm called Prime Trust LLC. Prime Trust made $650 million in wire transfer deposits into the Binance.US account during the quarter, the bank records show. [...] Binance.US's executives were concerned by the outflows because the transfers were taking place without their knowledge, according to messages reviewed by Reuters. The CEO of Binance.US at the time, Catherine Coley, wrote to a Binance finance executive in late 2020 asking for an explanation for the transfers, calling them "unexpected" and saying "no one mentioned them." [...]
Reuters was unable to trace what became of the $400 million. An unspecified portion of the money was subsequently sent to the Silvergate account of a Seychelles-incorporated firm called Key Vision Development Limited, according to a person with direct knowledge of the transfers. A 2021 corporate filing by another Binance unit identified CEO Zhao as a director of Key Vision. A former Silvergate executive confirmed that Key Vision held an account at Silvergate at the time. The money transfers suggest that the global Binance exchange, which is not licensed to operate in the United States, controlled the finances of Binance.US, despite maintaining that the American entity is entirely independent and operates as its "US partner." The Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have sought information from Binance and Binance.US about their relationship as part of ongoing investigations into potential breaches of financial rules, including whether Binance is using the American exchange as cover for doing business in the U.S.
Reuters couldn't determine the reason for the transfers or whether any of the money belonged to Binance.US customers. The exchange's public terms of use at the time said its customers' dollar deposits were held at Silvergate and a Nevada-based custodian firm called Prime Trust LLC. Prime Trust made $650 million in wire transfer deposits into the Binance.US account during the quarter, the bank records show. [...] Binance.US's executives were concerned by the outflows because the transfers were taking place without their knowledge, according to messages reviewed by Reuters. The CEO of Binance.US at the time, Catherine Coley, wrote to a Binance finance executive in late 2020 asking for an explanation for the transfers, calling them "unexpected" and saying "no one mentioned them." [...]
Reuters was unable to trace what became of the $400 million. An unspecified portion of the money was subsequently sent to the Silvergate account of a Seychelles-incorporated firm called Key Vision Development Limited, according to a person with direct knowledge of the transfers. A 2021 corporate filing by another Binance unit identified CEO Zhao as a director of Key Vision. A former Silvergate executive confirmed that Key Vision held an account at Silvergate at the time. The money transfers suggest that the global Binance exchange, which is not licensed to operate in the United States, controlled the finances of Binance.US, despite maintaining that the American entity is entirely independent and operates as its "US partner." The Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have sought information from Binance and Binance.US about their relationship as part of ongoing investigations into potential breaches of financial rules, including whether Binance is using the American exchange as cover for doing business in the U.S.
Again? (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny how we keep hearing of all these secret accounts or secret transfers of money in these "honest" crypto exchanges. Even better, and as this article relates, no one knows where the money goes to.
Hey, crypto bros. Open yourselves up to audits like real banks are required to do, then we can talk about using your so-called "currency". Until then, it's all a scam to launder and/or steal money.
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Funny how we keep hearing of all these secret accounts or secret transfers of money in these "honest" crypto exchanges. Even better, and as this article relates, no one knows where the money goes to.
Hey, crypto bros. Open yourselves up to audits like real banks are required to do, then we can talk about using your so-called "currency". Until then, it's all a scam to launder and/or steal money.
But.. but... I had to do a complex, intensive and intrusive KYC process to use a crypto exchange, they MUST be just like real banks!!!1111
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What is insane is what hoops a new sucker^H^H^H^H^H^Hinvestor has to go through. You have the KYC/AML gateways, which are mainly for the proles, while I'm sure those are not present in other places, or person to person transactions. Then, you have basic security measures... like not using a custodial wallet, and using some type of wallet app that is secure... but yet allows you to recover stuff via a BIP-39 code. Even hardware wallets, one needs to be careful with, for example using one that is open sour
Inside job? (Score:2)
Even the CEO didn't know what was going on? Where are the capital controls?
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Psst he was lying.
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No. Typically someone controls the cash. SBF certainly knew what he was doing with FTX.
Reverse the transfer (Score:2)
The CEO of Binance.US should have the authority to notify the bank it's a fraudulent transfer and must be reversed.
FTX (Score:3)
They were all in conversation with each other and knew that they're ALL doing shady shit.
It... Is... All.. A... Scam (Score:3)
Conversely, any time you add the functionality to a cryptocurrency (namely, accountability and the ability to make more than a handful of transactions a second) required to make it useful, you invariably end up with... a bank. At which point you may as well... just go to a real bank.
At this point (Score:1)
Crypto is an interesting idea, but it’s gonna have to wait a full two generations or more before it gets another shot at widespread use. The unbelievable amount of dishonesty and instability in that ecosystem is jaw-dropping. Once all the crypto corpses have stopped raining, I seriously doubt anyone alive today will trust their money to crypto. We can try to use it again sometime around 2100.
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Ho Hum... (Score:5, Funny)
another day, another cryptastrophy.
Stunning and Brave (Score:1)
Did we really think this whole ponzi wasn't a ponzi? /roflmfao
Bad news for TikTok (Score:2)