US Prosecutors Reject Dismissal Bid by Tornado Cash Co-Founder

US prosecutors reject dismissal of charges against Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm
Table of Contents

TL;DR:

  • Jay Clayton, SDNY prosecutor, rejected the motion for acquittal filed by Roman Storm, calling his defense based on copyright cases a distraction.
  • The prosecution seeks a new trial in October 2026 following last year’s jury deadlock on money laundering and sanctions violation charges.
  • Roman Storm faces a potential sentence of up to 40 years in prison for his role in developing the privacy protocol on the Ethereum network.

Prosecutors for the Southern District of New York rejected the attempt to dismiss charges by Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm. The prosecution argues that the use of intellectual property legal precedents is not applicable to serious financial crimes.

The case takes on technical relevance given that Storm is accused of conspiracy to commit money laundering and operating an unauthorized money transmitting business. The volume of funds processed by the protocol, occasionally linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, is the core of the legal conflict regarding the liability of open-source developers.

This refusal arises following the defense’s intention to use the case Cox Communications vs. Sony Music to argue a lack of criminal intent. However, Jay Clayton stated that Storm’s conduct bears no resemblance to civil liability cases for copyright infringement.

Tornado Cash---

The impact of political administration on the Storm case

The legal landscape is now more complex following changes in the Department of Justice (DOJ). Todd Blanche, current Acting Attorney General, has previously expressed his rejection of “regulation by prosecution,” a stance Storm cites in his favor on social media.

Despite these political statements, the prosecutors’ position remains firm. They argue that there is no evidence the co-founder implemented effective anti-money laundering measures in the cryptocurrency mixing protocol.

The legal showdown between Tornado Cash developers and the US government will define the future of privacy on the blockchain. While the defense advocates for the freedom of code, the prosecution insists on criminal responsibility for the illicit use of the platform.

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