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Samourai Wallet Founders Admit Guilt in Unlicensed Money Transmissions—DOJ Drops Heavier Charges

Samourai Wallet Founders Admit Guilt in Unlicensed Money Transmissions—DOJ Drops Heavier Charges

Published:
2025-08-01 00:00:51
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Samourai Wallet founders plead guilty to unlicensed money transmission; DOJ drops laundering, conspiracy charges

Crypto's privacy warriors take a plea deal—but dodged the bullet on money laundering.

In a plot twist even Hollywood wouldn't greenlight, the feds just downgraded their case against the privacy-focused wallet's creators. Turns out moving money without paperwork is illegal—who knew?

Bonus jab: Meanwhile, Wall Street banks still laundering billions get a stern frown and a $50 fine.

Plea deal

Lee reported that Judge Jed Rakoff pressed Keonne Rodriguez to state his criminal conduct “in his own words.”

Rodriguez told the court that his role at the firm meant that he was aware users were using the wallet “to launder criminals’ money.” Prosecutors argued that the knowledge alone is sufficient for a 60 month sentence even if they were not involved in the laundering.

Shapiro noted that had both counts gone to verdict, combined federal guidelines WOULD have pointed to 160 to 210 months. By pleading to the unlicensed transmission conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 1960, the developers face a statutory maximum of five years rather than a potential decade-plus exposure.

Defense‑side reaction framed the outcome as a pragmatic hedge rather than a legal endorsement of the US Department of Justice’s (DOJ) theory.

Amanda Tuminelli, executive director and CLO at the DeFi Education Fundthat the DOJ “misinterprets Section 1960 whenever they accuse a non‑custodial software dev of ‘transferring funds on behalf of the public,’”

Tuminelli added that the pleas don’t change the policy fight over how the law should apply to open‑source wallet software. She said:

Case background

US and international authorities, seizing its domain and web infrastructure in collaboration with the Icelandic and Portuguese police, the IRS, the FBI, and Europol.

The authorities also issued a warrant that removed the Android app from Google Play for US users.

Prosecutors alleged founders Keonne Rodriguez and William Lonergan Hill ran a mixing service through Samourai that processed more than $2 billion in bitcoin tied to illicit activity, including $100 million linked to dark‑web markets. 

The app, one of the best‑known privacy‑focused Bitcoin wallets, had been downloaded over 100,000 times.

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