U.S. lawmakers scramble to regulate crypto in wake of FTX turmoil

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by 777fer
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NEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - U.S. senators on Wednesday pressed Congress to regulate cryptocurrency under existing financial rules, as lawmakers scramble to rein in the troubled industry after prosecutors filed criminal charges against FTX founder Samuel Bankman-Fried.

Lawmakers are generally in agreement that crypto firms should have greater regulation, but there are divergent views on how the industry should be regulated.

Critics say the crypto world is riddled with fraud and misconduct, but proponents say the industry has simply suffered from a lack of regulation.

U.S. prosecutors on Tuesday charged FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried with money laundering and fraud, among other violations. The charges capped a stunning downfall for Bankman-Fried, who amassed a fortune valued over $20 billion as he rode a cryptocurrency boom to build FTX into one of the world's largest exchanges before it abruptly collapsed this year.

"It is time for Congress to make the crypto industry follow the same money-laundering rules as everyone else," U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren said during a hearing of the key Senate Banking Committee.

She and Republican Senator Roger Marshall from Kansas earlier announced legislation aimed at closing money laundering loopholes in the crypto industry.

Republican Senator Pat Toomey, the ranking member of the Banking Committee, said he did not think the money-laundering rules were well-suited to crypto, describing existing anti-money laundering technology as "archaic."

Warren wants to hand control of crypto oversight to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis said at the hearing that she plans to reintroduce a bill that would give more authority to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), an agency critics worry would not go far enough to rein in the industry.

When asked whether he believed Washington bears some blame for FTX's collapse, Toomey agreed.

"The absence of legislation that creates the guardrails for regulation and the corresponding absence of any certainty has driven activity offshore to places like the Bahamas," he said after Wednesday's hearing. "That doesn't always end well for American consumers and others."

Each of the hearing's witnesses - which included actor and crypto skeptic Ben McKenzie Schenkkan and "SharkTank" television personality and FTX investor Kevin O'Leary - said they believe there is likely more fraud to be found in the crypto world.

Without U.S. regulation, the value of crypto investments could disappear, said hearing witness and American University law professor Hilary Allen.

"Whilst that is very bad news for the people who've already invested, I think it's very good news for the rest of us because it's been kept out of the broader financial system and we won't suffer the consequences of its broader failure."

Reporting by Chris Prentice and Moira Warburton Additional reporting by Hannah Lang; Editing by Howard Goller

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

nickelundertone on December 14th, 2022 at 18:44 UTC »

I'm happy Warren stands up for consumers but SBF ran a pyramid ponzi scheme, as I understand it. He didn't launder money, he just took it and bought some real estate.

Besides that, it's dead easy to trace transfers through the blockchain. Which is why real money laundering operations still prefer cash.

retrograderevolution on December 14th, 2022 at 18:10 UTC »

That someone has to say this is ridiculous

2_Spicy_2_Impeach on December 14th, 2022 at 17:49 UTC »

Don’t a lot of them (at least the exchanges) do this in some capacity already? I remember two distinct examples of the DoJ seizing BILLIONS in Bitcoin, and arresting the folks involved. The folks that stole it weren’t able to easily cash out most of it without leaving a paper trail.

Not saying they can’t do better but I thought they had some it already.

https://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/how-a-young-couple-failed-to-launder-billions-of-dollars-in-stolen-bitcoin

https://archive.ph/qg7gi