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2 Russian Citizens Behind 2011 Hack of Mt. Gox, US Alleges

    US
    prosecutors have fingered two Russian nationals as the masterminds behind the 2011 hack of
    Mt. Gox , the largest Bitcoin (BTC) exchange in the world at the time. The
    Department of Justice (DOJ) in an indictment unsealed on Friday charged Alexey
    Bilyuchenko, 43, and Aleksandr Verner, 29, with conspiracy to launder about 647,000
    bitcoins following their hack of the
    exchange.

    According
    to the prosecutors, Bilyuchenko and Verner between September 2011 and at least May 2014 stole the vast majority of bitcoins
    belonging to Mt. Gox customers. This allegedly contributed to the eventual demise of the platform in February 2014.

    The DOJ said it unsealed charges against the Russian nationals in both New York
    and California, following ongoing multi-agency investigation into the case.
    The prosecutor also accused Bilyuchenko of partnering with another individual, Alexander Vinnik, to run
    the defunct Bulgaria-based cryptocurrency exchange , BTC-e, using ‘ill-gotten
    gains’ from his Mt. Gox hack.

    BTC-e, according
    to the prosecutors, for years aided criminals across the world, ‘to launder
    billions of dollars.’ These included computer hackers, ransomware actors,
    narcotics rings and corrupt public officials.

    How Mt. Gox’s Stolen Bitcoins Were Moved: DOJ

    According
    to the DOJ, Mt. Gox kept its customers’ crypto wallets and private keys on a
    computer server in Japan. However, after Bilyuchenko, Verner and their
    accomplice allegedly stole some of the bitcoins, they laundered most of them through their
    accounts at two other online BTC exchanges.

    Furthermore,
    the DOJ claimed that Bilyuchenko, Verner and others as part of a device
    to launder the Bitcoin sometime
    in April 2012 entered into a so-called advertising services contract with a New
    York-based bitcoin brokerage. The firm allegedly helped the accused to hide and
    liquidate their stolen bitcoins by making wire
    transfers of about $6.6
    million to oversea bank accounts they controlled and those in the names of
    shell companies.

    “In
    exchange for the wire transfers, the New York Bitcoin Broker allegedly received
    ‘credit’ on Exchange-1, through which Bilyuchenko, Verner, and their
    co-conspirators allegedly laundered more than 300,000 of the bitcoins stolen
    from Mt. Gox,” DOJ noted, explaining its unsealed indictment.

    US
    prosecutors have fingered two Russian nationals as the masterminds behind the 2011 hack of
    Mt. Gox , the largest Bitcoin (BTC) exchange in the world at the time. The
    Department of Justice (DOJ) in an indictment unsealed on Friday charged Alexey
    Bilyuchenko, 43, and Aleksandr Verner, 29, with conspiracy to launder about 647,000
    bitcoins following their hack of the
    exchange.

    According
    to the prosecutors, Bilyuchenko and Verner between September 2011 and at least May 2014 stole the vast majority of bitcoins
    belonging to Mt. Gox customers. This allegedly contributed to the eventual demise of the platform in February 2014.

    The DOJ said it unsealed charges against the Russian nationals in both New York
    and California, following ongoing multi-agency investigation into the case.
    The prosecutor also accused Bilyuchenko of partnering with another individual, Alexander Vinnik, to run
    the defunct Bulgaria-based cryptocurrency exchange , BTC-e, using ‘ill-gotten
    gains’ from his Mt. Gox hack.

    BTC-e, according
    to the prosecutors, for years aided criminals across the world, ‘to launder
    billions of dollars.’ These included computer hackers, ransomware actors,
    narcotics rings and corrupt public officials.

    How Mt. Gox’s Stolen Bitcoins Were Moved: DOJ

    According
    to the DOJ, Mt. Gox kept its customers’ crypto wallets and private keys on a
    computer server in Japan. However, after Bilyuchenko, Verner and their
    accomplice allegedly stole some of the bitcoins, they laundered most of them through their
    accounts at two other online BTC exchanges.

    Furthermore,
    the DOJ claimed that Bilyuchenko, Verner and others as part of a device
    to launder the Bitcoin sometime
    in April 2012 entered into a so-called advertising services contract with a New
    York-based bitcoin brokerage. The firm allegedly helped the accused to hide and
    liquidate their stolen bitcoins by making wire
    transfers of about $6.6
    million to oversea bank accounts they controlled and those in the names of
    shell companies.

    “In
    exchange for the wire transfers, the New York Bitcoin Broker allegedly received
    ‘credit’ on Exchange-1, through which Bilyuchenko, Verner, and their
    co-conspirators allegedly laundered more than 300,000 of the bitcoins stolen
    from Mt. Gox,” DOJ noted, explaining its unsealed indictment.

    https://www.financemagnates.com//cryptocurrency/2-russian-citizens-behind-2011-hack-of-mt-gox-us-alleges/”>

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