May 13, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Cardano to Directly Feature Blockchain and Assets on Brave Browser Animoca Brands Plans U.S. Listing to Capture ‘Unique Moment’ of Trump Administration: FT Donald Trump Jr. Squashes Rumors of ‘Truth Social’ Memecoin Pump.fun Launches Revenue Sharing for Coin Creators in Push to Incentivize Long-Term Activity Bitcoin Crossing $2T in Market Cap Triggers Wave of New Buyers, but Key Players Tread Cautiously, Onchain Data Show Bitcoin Drop Causes $500M Long Liquidations as Dogecoin, ADA Slide 7% What to Expect at Consensus 2025 Coinbase Shares Jump 8% on S&P 500 Inclusion Penny Stocks Attempt to Ride Crypto’s Coattails New York Mayor Eric Adams to Crypto Industry: Come Build an Empire in NYC

US to Release Jailed BTC-e Operator Vinnik in Russia Prisoner Swap

Alexander Vinnik, the jailed former operator of once mighty bitcoin exchange BTC-e, is being released from U.S. custody as part of a prisoner exchange with Russia.

Vinnik, 44, is being swapped with jailed American teacher Marc Fogel, who returned to the U.S. last night after negotiators struck a surprise breakthrough with the Kremlin. It had not immediately been clear who was on the other side of the deal.

But BTC-e was one of the early exchanges that popularized the buying and selling of the world’s most popular digital asset. It had over 1 million customers and moved over $9 billion of transactions between 2011 and 2017.

Its popularity also fostered a thriving criminal underground who relied on it to move in and out of ill-gotten bitcoin proceeds, according to U.S. prosecutors. They accused Vinnik of operating BTC-e “with the intent to promote” drug dealers, money launders and other cybercriminals, and caused the loss of $121 million.

Vinnik was arrested in Greece in 2017 and ultimately extradited to the U.S. He pled guilty to money laundering conspiracy in 2024 and faced a maximum of 20 years in prison.

His lawyers had previously lobbied unsuccessfully for his inclusion in other high-profile U.S.-Russia prisoner exchanges, like last year’s deal over formerly jailed Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.

This post was originally published on this site