KuCoin pleads guilty to operating unlicensed business paying $300M in fines
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Home » Regulation » KuCoin pleads guilty to operating unlicensed business paying $300M in fines
Seychelles-based KuCoin resolves criminal and civil cases with $300 million in penalties, while founders sign deferred prosecution agreements.
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Photo: Maor Winetrob
Key Takeaways
- KuCoin pleaded guilty to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business, agreeing to pay $300 million in fines.
- KuCoin founders were accused of failing to implement an anti-money-laundering program, violating the Bank Secrecy Act.
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KuCoin, a Seychelles-based crypto exchange, pleaded guilty to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business and agreed to pay $300 million in combined fines and forfeitures, according to a Bloomberg report.
Peken Global Ltd., one of three entities operating as KuCoin, entered the plea on Monday in Manhattan before US District Judge Andrew Carter. The penalties consist of a $113 million fine and $184.5 million in forfeitures.
KuCoin founders Chun Gan and Ke Tang were charged with conspiring to operate an unlicensed business and failing to implement an anti-money-laundering program. Both agreed to deferred prosecution agreements and will forfeit $2.7 million each.
The indictment alleged that KuCoin violated the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to verify customer identities, establish proper anti-money-laundering protocols, and file suspicious activity reports.
These compliance failures reportedly enabled the exchange to process billions in transactions, including those tied to illicit activities.
The exchange previously settled a civil case with the New York Attorney General’s Office in December 2023, paying $22 million in fines and agreeing to stop operations in the state.
New York authorities had accused KuCoin of operating without proper registration as a securities and commodities broker-dealer and misrepresenting itself as a crypto exchange.
The case follows recent enforcement action against BitMEX, another Seychelles-based crypto exchange, which was ordered to pay $100 million for violating US anti-money laundering laws.
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