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Japanese crypto exchange Fisco sues Binance for allegedly facilitating the laundering of $9 million – a report by Saumil Kohli.

Traditional finance has a long way to go before it's ready to embrace digital currencies, crypto executives noted in a recent
Traditional finance has a long way to go before it’s ready to embrace digital currencies, crypto executives noted in a recent fintech festival in Singapore.

Crypto exchange giant Binance is being sued in a U.S. court by Japanese crypto exchange Fisco for allegedly facilitating the laundering of more than $9 million of stolen cryptocurrency. Fisco filed a complaint in the Northern District Court of California, saying that Binance’s “lax” know-your-customer (KYC) policies allowed cybercriminals to convert stolen crypto from Zaif exchange to other crypto or cash. Crypto exchange Fisco is the owner of the Zaif.

Zaif lost around $63 million worth of cryptocurrency in a hack.

Zaif was hacked in 2018 and lost around $63 million worth of cryptocurrency, including bitcoin, at the time. Fisco alleges in the complaint that “hackers who hacked Zaif eventually laundered 1,451.7 bitcoin through the crypto exchange Binance,” citing blockchain analytics. The laundered bitcoin was valued at approximately $9.4 million at the time. Currently, those bitcoins are worth more than $15 million.

Fisco noted in the lawsuit that Binance’s KYC and anti-money laundering protocols are “shockingly lax and do not measure up to industry standards.” Binance’s KYC policy allowed new users to open accounts and transact on the exchange in amounts below two bitcoins without providing any meaningful identification, Fisco mentioned in the lawsuit.

Binance served as both a receptacle and transmitter of criminal funds.

“The thieves broke the stolen bitcoin into thousands of separate transactions and accounts, all valued below the 2-bitcoin threshold…In short, Binance served as both a receptacle and transmitter of criminal funds,” reads the complaint. Fisco went on to say that Zaif contacted Binance staff shortly after the hack and requested them to freeze transactions and accounts involving the stolen bitcoin, but “Binance either intentionally or negligently failed to interrupt the money laundering process when it could have done so. ” According to the complaint, the Japanese firm is now seeking a jury trial and more than $9 million from Binance, with interest from the time of the hack.

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