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CATEGORY: tornado cash


Sep 28, 2024 01:00

Tornado Cash Co-Founder Roman Storm to Face Trial After Judge Rejects Dismissal Motion

Judge Failla's ruling emphasized that the government only needs to prove that Storm knew he was handling proceeds from a crime.

Sep 28, 2024 01:25

Tornado Cash Loses Motion to Dismiss

A short summary of the recent decision regarding the Tornado Cash case.

Sep 03, 2024 01:00

Van Loon Plaintiffs to Argue Before Fifth Circuit in Case Against US Treasury Over Tornado Cash Sanctions

The Van Loon plaintiffs will present their case before the Fifth Circuit, challenging Tornado Cash's inclusion on the SDN list.

 Base DeFi project disappears after rug pull

Author: Cointelegraph by Arijit Sarkar
United States
Sep 17, 2024 12:00

Base DeFi project disappears after rug pull

BaseBros Fi, a DeFi protocol on the Base blockchain, vanishes after stealing user funds via an unaudited contract.

OKX Takes Action: Accounts Involving Tornado Cash To Be Banned

Author: Christian Encila
United Kingdom
Aug 10, 2024 12:05

OKX Takes Action: Accounts Involving Tornado Cash To Be Banned

The cryptocurrency exchange OKX has announced a firm policy banning accounts linked to the questionable mixing service Tornado Cash in an attempt to prevent illicit activity and promote compliance with international laws. According to OKX CEO Star Xu, any account found to be exploited by Tornado Cash or other authorized firms like Garantex would be cancelled without delay. okx 1. Garantex Tornado cashokx 2. okx https://t.co/MTJ7OtQRny Star (@star_okx) August 9, 2024 Tornado Cash Controversy Tornado Cash is recognized for hiding crypto transactions, which unscrupulous people exploit to launder money and commit other crimes. The firm is under more regulatory scrutiny after the US Treasury Department penalized it in 2023 for allowing over $7 billion in unlawful transactions. Related Reading: Bitcoin NVT Golden Cross Gives Bottom Signal: What Happened Last 2 Times OKX Compliance Measures Nowadays, OKX’s risk control systems are programmed to automatically find and close accounts linked to Tornado Cash or another approved company. Xu underlined that the interaction is necessary to follow relevant sanctions rules, particularly those enforced by the United States. OKX’s Tornado Cash crackdown follows allegations of the service sending stolen money via protocol attacks. On August 7, the Rain crypto exchange hacker laundered 1,155 Ether using Tornado Cash. #okx #urgent ALL @okx EXCHANGE USERS ARE AT RISK Since 2019, I have been a partner of the OKX exchange, recommended it to you and actively used it myself. Until today, it worked honestly and stably. But today, I regret to admit that the exchange policy and all the pic.twitter.com/fQiDRj6aHO Satoshi Friends (@slezisatoshi) August 8, 2024 Response To User Concerns Xu said that the user has before made large transactions via approved exchanges or DeFi systems. The individual was still allowed to withdraw clean money before their account was banned nonetheless. Emphasizing that OKX cannot provide services to sanctioned individuals or companies, Xu clarified that compliance concerns made it impossible to move data from an old account to a new one. Xu informed the wider user base that most consumers operate distant from approved businesses, hence most of them are unlikely to be harmed. He underlined that preserving the commitment of the exchange to financial integrity and regulatory compliance depends on these steps. Related Reading: Dogecoin Price (DOGE) Poised for a Steady Increase, Inspired by Bitcoin Impact On Tornado Cash OKX’s deactivation of Tornado Cash accounts follows a crypto industry trend towards regulatory compliance and legality. Binance and Kraken both delist privacy coins and prohibit mixing. Roman Semenov, Alexey Pertsev, and Roman Storma trio of Russian immigrants living in Europefounded Tornado Cash in 2019. Pertsev was sentenced to five years in jail in May 2024 for breaking anti-money laundering regulations with transactions utilizing Tornado Cash. Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView

Aug 10, 2024 01:00

OKX to Deactivate Accounts Linked to Sanctioned Entities, Including Tornado Cash and Garantex

OKX warned that users transferring funds to or from sanctioned entities will have their accounts closed.

 Tornado Cash sanctions effective, reveal Ethereum weakness: NY Fed

Author: Cointelegraph by Derek Andersen
United States
Aug 08, 2024 12:00

Tornado Cash sanctions effective, reveal Ethereum weakness: NY Fed

Cooperation with the US Treasury sanctions on Tornado Cash was strongest at the user level and weaker further along the settlement chain.

Aug 31, 2024 01:25

The Fight for Bitcoin Privacy Has Truly Begun

"Then they fight you" has finally arrived. Financial privacy is in the crosshairs and Bitcoin's promise as "freedom money" is at stake. From "The Privacy Issue".

 Tornado Cash dev Alexey Pertsev seeks more funding for legal appeal

Author: Cointelegraph by Amaka Nwaokocha
United States
Aug 12, 2024 12:00

Tornado Cash dev Alexey Pertsev seeks more funding for legal appeal

Pertsevs case is a pivotal moment for the crypto community and advocates of digital privacy.

 Pancake Bunny hacker siphons $2.9M of Ether through Tornado Cash

Author: Cointelegraph by Arijit Sarkar
United States
Jul 09, 2024 12:00

Pancake Bunny hacker siphons $2.9M of Ether through Tornado Cash

Three years after the Pancake Bunny flash loan attack, the hacker moved $3 million in ETH through Tornado Cash.

 Tornado Cash developer Alexey Pertsev denied bail while preparing appeal

Author: Cointelegraph by Tom Mitchelhill
United States
Jul 15, 2024 12:00

Tornado Cash developer Alexey Pertsev denied bail while preparing appeal

Pertsev will now spend the next year in prison while his lawyers prepare an appeal for money laundering charges.

Jul 14, 2024 01:00

Bail Denied for Tornado Cash Dev Alexey Pertsev Amid Money Laundering Conviction Appeal

The 31-year-old Tornado Cash dev was recently sentenced to 64 months in prison.

Jul 11, 2024 01:00

CertiK Flags Nearly $1M Transfer to Tornado Cash from CoinStats Exploit

Two wallets involved in the CoinStats exploit moved 211 ETH and 100 ETH into Tornado Cash.

 AI makes it even easier for governments to surveil you  Nym CEO

Author: Cointelegraph by Jonathan DeYoung
United States
Jun 27, 2024 12:00

AI makes it even easier for governments to surveil you Nym CEO

Nym CEO Harry Halpin tells The Agenda podcast that artificial intelligence makes it easier than ever to conduct surveillance against activists and dissidents.

 Crypto community backs Tornado Cash devs with $2.3M legal fund

Author: Cointelegraph by Prashant Jha
United States
Jun 20, 2024 12:00

Crypto community backs Tornado Cash devs with $2.3M legal fund

Tornado Cashs founders and developers are in the legal crosshairs, but the crypto community argues merely writing code shouldnt be a crime.

 Remilia hacker moves $4.3M to Tornado Cash

Author: Cointelegraph by Ezra Reguerra
United States
Jun 18, 2024 12:00

Remilia hacker moves $4.3M to Tornado Cash

On March 16, millions of dollars worth of non-fungible tokens and Ether was stolen from the Remilia DAO and transferred to an unknown wallet address.

 Samourai Wallet shutdown: Implications for other privacy and self-custody tools

Author: Cointelegraph by Cointelegraph Research
United States
Jun 15, 2024 12:00

Samourai Wallet shutdown: Implications for other privacy and self-custody tools

The seizure of the Samourai Wallet website and the indictment of its founders might have implications for other privacy-preserving self-custodial tools.

US lawmakers introduce bill to suspend crypto mixer transactions

Author: Oluwapelumi Adejumo
United States
May 09, 2024 01:10

US lawmakers introduce bill to suspend crypto mixer transactions

US lawmakers have proposed a new bill that aims to temporarily prevent financial institutions from engaging in transactions involving funds that have been through crypto mixers. Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) introduced the bill on May 7 and received support from Representatives Bill Foster, Brad Sherman, and Emmanuel Cleaver. Blockchain Integrity Act The proposed legislation, dubbed […]

The post US lawmakers introduce bill to suspend crypto mixer transactions appeared first on CryptoSlate.

 What is Tornado Cash, and why did it get into trouble?

Author: Cointelegraph by Dilip Kumar Patairya
United States
May 08, 2025 12:01

What is Tornado Cash, and why did it get into trouble?

What is Tornado Cash?

Tornado Cash is a decentralized, non-custodial crypto mixer designed to enhance transaction privacy on public blockchains. It uses smart contracts and zero-knowledge (ZK) proofs to conceal the onchain link between the sender and receiver of a transaction.

Launched by Roman Storm and Roman Semenov on Ethereum in 2019, Tornado Cash allows users to send and receive cryptocurrency anonymously, without exposing their wallet history. Unlike centralized mixers, Tornado Cash operates entirely onchain through immutable smart contracts, meaning no central party controls the funds. 

When a user deposits crypto, such as Ether (ETH), Tornado Cash generates a cryptographic note, which the user can later use to withdraw the same amount to a different address. The protocol was launched to boost privacy in Ethereum-based transactions. Over time, the developers have expanded its functionality to support multiple Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM)-compatible chains, including BNB Smart Chain (BSC), Optimism, Polygon, Arbitrum and Avalanche.

Tornado Cash supports several ERC-20 tokens and native ETH across Ethereum and other EVM-compatible blockchains. At its peak usage, Tornado Cash supported several ERC-20 tokens, including:

  • On Ethereum: Ether (ETH), Dai (DAI), USDC (USDC), Tether’s USDt (USDT), Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC).
  • On other EVM chains (via smart contract deployment): BNB (BNB), Polygon (POL), Avalanche (AVAX) and ETH on Arbitrum and Optimism.

Did you know? Tornado Cash launched in 2019 as an experiment in financial privacy using just a few smart contracts. By 2022, it had processed billions in crypto transactions without ever holding user funds directly.

How Tornado Cash works

Unlike traditional financial systems that prioritize users’ privacy, blockchain public ledgers are accessible to everyone on blockchain explorers. Tornado Cash counters this by enabling anonymous transactions through smart contracts and zero-knowledge proofs, specifically zk-SNARKs.

Crypto mixers typically pool and shuffle users’ funds, deduct a fee, and redistribute them. Tornado Cash, however, uses a pool-based system where deposits are commingled in a smart contract, and withdrawals to new addresses are delinked using zk-SNARKs, ensuring anonymity without random shuffling.

Here’s how it works:

  • At its core, Tornado Cash has smart contracts that break the onchain link between a sender and receiver. 
  • When a user deposits a cryptocurrency into a Tornado Cash pool, the smart contract issues a cryptographic note that the user can later use to withdraw the same amount to a different wallet address without revealing the link between the two.

As Tornado Cash is a decentralized protocol, the underlying smart contracts cannot be changed or destroyed by anyone, including the Tornado Cash decentralized autonomous organization (DAO).

The system uses ZK-proofs, which allow a user to prove that they have the right to withdraw a specific amount without revealing what deposit was theirs. This mechanism ensures that deposits and withdrawals are mathematically linked but anonymous.

Tornado Cash is non-custodial, meaning it does not hold user funds at any point. The code runs independently and cannot be altered or controlled by the developers. The funds can remain in the pool for as long as the user likes.

Before sanctions, Tornado Cash was primarily accessed via its web interface by connecting a crypto wallet. Advanced users could also interact with the protocol’s smart contracts directly using a command-line interface.

How Tornado Cash got into trouble

Tornado Cash landed in legal trouble primarily because it was allegedly used to launder billions of dollars in illicit funds, including crypto stolen in high-profile hacks. The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned Tornado Cash on Aug. 8, 2022, under Executive Order 13694.

There were several reasons behind Tornado Cash facing issues with regulators: 

  • Facilitation of money laundering: Tornado Cash was accused of facilitating money laundering, with the OFAC claiming it processed over $7 billion in virtual currency since 2019, approximately 30% of which was linked to illicit activity, per Chainalysis.
  • Support for North Korean cybercrime: The platform was linked to laundering more than $455 million stolen by the Lazarus Group, a North Korean state-sponsored hacking group.
  • Threat to national security: The OFAC accused Tornado Cash of materially assisting cyber-enabled activities originating outside the US, posing a significant threat to US national security, foreign policy and economic stability.
  • Lack of effective controls: The Treasury highlighted Tornado Cash’s failure to implement adequate Anti-Money Laundering (AML) measures, allowing malicious actors to exploit it.
  • Obfuscation of illicit transactions: According to the OFAC, Tornado Cash was facilitating anonymous transactions by obscuring their origin, destination and counterparties, enabling criminals to hide the proceeds of cybercrimes.

Tornado Cash was designed to obfuscate the entire transaction history. This feature was beneficial for privacy, particularly in use cases like payroll, donations and personal spending, where anonymity can be important. 

However, the very feature that made it attractive for legitimate use also made it appealing to bad actors looking to launder money or conceal illicit transactions. This drew significant attention from regulators, who became concerned about the potential for criminal activities such as money laundering, terrorism financing or other forms of illicit finance.

On March 21, 2025, the US Treasury lifted sanctions imposed by the Biden administration against Tornado Cash. 

Did you know? In August 2022, the US Treasury sanctioned Tornado Cash smart contracts, marking the first time code, not a person or organization, was blacklisted. This sparked a heated global debate over open-source freedom.

Debate around Tornado Cash

The action against Tornado Cash followed similar sanctions against Blender.io in May 2022, signaling a broader regulatory push to address cryptocurrency mixers. Such actions sparked a controversy in the crypto community. 

Critics of regulatory actions on the decentralized crypto mixers argue that sanctioning open-source code and punishing developers for creating privacy-preserving tools pose a threat to free speech and innovation. It undermines the neutrality of blockchain tools and sets a precedent where governments could censor software itself, not just its use.

On the other hand, advocates of hardened regulatory sanctions say it is a necessary step to combat crypto-related crime and that illicit activity cannot be left unchecked. While the protocol does have legitimate uses, the scale of its illicit use, nearly 30% of funds tied to illicit actors, outweighed these benefits. 

They argue that the decentralized, non-custodial nature of the smart contracts in such protocols, which cannot be modified or controlled, complicates efforts to mitigate misuse. This leaves regulators with no option but to take action against the protocol itself to deter similar platforms from operating without safeguards.

The Treasury held that the platform consistently failed to implement effective controls to prevent money laundering by malicious cyber actors. This lack of oversight allowed illicit actors to exploit the service without restriction, prompting the need for regulatory intervention to curb unchecked abuse.

Nevertheless, the case has set up pressing questions about how to balance financial privacy with security and how decentralized, permissionless systems can coexist with traditional legal frameworks.

Did you know? The Tornado Cash protocol is governed by a DAO, allowing tokenholders to vote on upgrades and proposals. Even after sanctions, the DAO continued to operate briefly on-chain.

The efficacy of “sanctions” and their removal

Despite sanctions, Tornado Cash remained operational through decentralized technologies like InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) and Tor. Its resilience led to doubts around the efficacy of sanctions on decentralized protocols and the broader implications for crypto regulation under evolving US policy.

According to Chainalysis, Tornado Cash kept functioning on the dark web despite the sanctions. Its front end was available on the IPFS and via The Onion Router (known as Tor). IPFS is a peer-to-peer, distributed protocol for data storage and sharing, while Tor is open-source software enabling anonymous communication, often called the dark web.

Per Flipside Crypto data, Tornado Cash saw $1.9 billion in deposits between Jan. 1 and June 30 in 2024, compared to $635.696 million in deposits during the same period in 2023.

Unlike centralized services, Tornado Cash is decentralized and autonomous, making it difficult to shut down or control. But the US government targeted associated infrastructure, including GitHub repositories and websites. 

Developer Alexey Pertsev was arrested in the Netherlands on suspicion of concealing illicit financial flows and facilitating money laundering. Two of the co-founders, Roman Storm and Roman Semenov, were charged in 2023 for involvement in more than $1 billion in money laundering.

A Dutch court later suspended Pertsev’s pretrial detention. A US court determined that Tornado Cash’s smart contracts aren’t “property,” though legal experts note this doesn’t clear the founders of other charges. High-profile figures like Vitalik Buterin and Edward Snowden have publicly supported Pertsev in the matter.

The Treasury stated that a review of legal and policy issues regarding sanctions in “evolving technology and legal environments” led to the repeal of sanctions. In January 2025, a US court overturned the sanctions. The ruling came after Joseph Van Loon and other Tornado Cash users filed an appeal against the sanctions, arguing that the OFAC had overstepped its congressional authority by blacklisting the mixer in 2022.

In April 2025, a federal judge in Texas ruled that the US Treasury Department’s sanctions against Tornado Cash were unlawful and barred the agency from reimposing them on the crypto mixer.

Tornado Cash sanctions repeal: What’s next for crypto privacy?

The repeal of sanctions on Tornado Cash marks a pivotal moment for decentralized finance (DeFi) and crypto privacy. It underscores the challenges of regulating permissionless, immutable systems while highlighting the growing legal recognition of code as distinct from traditional property or entities.

For users, the lifting of sanctions restores access to a tool designed for financial privacy, potentially boosting adoption for legitimate use cases like shielding personal transactions or protecting sensitive donations.

However, the repeal does not resolve the underlying tension between privacy and regulatory oversight. Tornado Cash’s continued operation, even during sanctions, demonstrates the resilience of decentralized protocols but also their vulnerability to misuse. 

Regulators worldwide are likely to scrutinize similar platforms, pushing for stronger AML and Know Your Customer (KYC) frameworks, even in DeFi. This could lead to hybrid solutions where privacy tools incorporate voluntary compliance mechanisms to deter illicit activity without compromising user autonomy.

For Tornado Cash itself, the future remains uncertain. While the protocol’s smart contracts are immutable, its governance via the Tornado Cash DAO could evolve to address regulatory concerns, such as implementing optional transparency features for compliant users. 

The legal battles of its developers — Pertsev, Storm and Semenov — are ongoing, and their outcomes could shape public perception and trust in the platform. A guilty verdict could deter developers from building similar tools, while acquittals might embolden innovation in privacy-focused DeFi.

The Tornado Cash saga has also sparked broader discussions about the right to financial privacy in the digital age. Advocates argue that privacy is a fundamental right, especially in an era of pervasive blockchain surveillance, where every transaction is traceable by default. 

Critics, however, emphasize the societal cost of unchecked anonymity, pointing to cases like the Lazarus Group’s exploits. Striking a balance will require collaboration between developers, regulators and the crypto community to ensure privacy tools serve legitimate users without becoming havens for crime.

As the crypto landscape evolves, Tornado Cash will likely influence the next generation of privacy protocols. Emerging technologies, such as advanced ZK-proofs or layer-2 scaling solutions, could enable even more robust privacy guarantees while addressing regulatory concerns. For now, the repeal of sanctions offers a reprieve for Tornado Cash and its users, but it also sets the stage for a new chapter in the ongoing debate over privacy, security and the future of decentralized finance.

Poloniex Hacker Transfers Over $3.3 Million Worth of ETH to Sanctioned Tornado Cash

Author: Anthonia Isichei
Bulgaria
May 08, 2024 01:00

Poloniex Hacker Transfers Over $3.3 Million Worth of ETH to Sanctioned Tornado Cash

The hacker who drained $125 million in crypto assets from Poloniex last year, has sent over 1,100 ETH to Tornado Cash.

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