- Roman Storm’s trial for Tornado Cash postponed to December due to complex legal issues.
- The defense argues Tornado Cash operates via immutable contracts, with Storm having no control over user actions.
- The legal debate centers on whether developers can be held liable for illicit activities facilitated by their software.
The trial of Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, a cryptocurrency mixing service, has been postponed to early December following a ruling by Judge Katherine Polk Failla of the Southern District of New York. Originally scheduled for September, Storm’s defense successfully argued for more time to prepare, citing the complexity of the legal issues involved.
Tornado Cash, a platform designed to enhance privacy by obscuring cryptocurrency transactions, has been at the center of a contentious legal battle. Prosecutors allege that Storm and his co-founders should have implemented measures to prevent illicit activities facilitated through their service. However, Storm’s defense contends that Tornado Cash operates via immutable smart contracts and that Storm ceased involvement with the platform after May 2020.
During the recent hearing, defense attorneys pressed for broader disclosure of documents crucial to their case, including communications between U.S. and Dutch investigators related to Storm’s co-founder, Alexey Pertsev, who faces charges in the Netherlands. The defense argues that these documents are essential for understanding the context and legality of the charges against Storm.
One of the pivotal issues in the case is whether developers like Storm can be held accountable for the actions of users employing their software for illegal purposes. Defense attorney Brian Klein emphasized that Storm had no control over the financial transactions facilitated by Tornado Cash, likening it to other technologies like WhatsApp, which are not held liable for their users’ communications.
Prosecutors argue that any service aware of criminal activities must take steps to prevent them. They say Tornado Cash didn’t do this, making it responsible for helping with money laundering and other illegal activities.
The judge’s choice to delay the trial shows the challenges in figuring out the legal duties of developers in decentralized cryptocurrency. Judge Failla’s future decisions on evidence disclosure and search warrants will likely set important examples for other cases involving blockchain technology and privacy-focused apps.
Meanwhile, the fate of Alexey Pertsev, Storm’s co-founder, has already been decided in a Dutch court, where he was found guilty of money laundering charges related to Tornado Cash. His case underscores the global legal scrutiny facing developers of cryptocurrency technologies amid increasing regulatory efforts worldwide.
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