Connect with us

Coin Market

Tornado mixer dropped from US blacklist

Published

on

The US Treasury Department has dropped cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash from its sanctions list, the agency said on March 21. 

The removal follows a January ruling by a US appeals court, which said the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) cannot sanction Tornado’s smart contracts because they are not the property of any foreign national. 

According to the January court ruling, “Tornado Cash’s immutable smart contracts (the lines of privacy-enabling software code) are not the ‘property’ of a foreign national or entity, meaning […] OFAC overstepped its congressionally defined authority.”

In a March 21 statement, the Treasury said OFAC removed several dozen Tornado-affiliated smart contract addresses on the Ethereum blockchain network from its sanctions list. 

Tornado’s native token, Tornado Cash (TORN), is up around 60% on the news, according to data from CoinMarketCap. 

As of March 21, TORN has a market capitalization of around $73 million and a fully diluted value (FDV) of nearly $140 million, the data shows. 

OFAC is the Treasury’s office for administering economic and trade sanctions on states and foreign nationals.

Tornado Cash lets users pool crypto deposits into a mixer and then withdraw it later to different wallet addresses, making the original funding source difficult to track.

TORN is up around 60% on the news. Source: CoinMarketCap

Related: Tornado Cash dev Alexey Pertsev’s bail a ‘crucial step’ in getting fair trial, defense says

Money laundering allegations

In August 2022, OFAC sanctioned Tornado Cash after alleging the blockchain protocol helped launder cryptocurrency stolen by Lazarus Group, a North Korean hacking outfit. 

Lazarus Group has allegedly stolen billions of dollars in crypto through various cyberattacks.

In February, Lazarus was accused of pilfering $1.4 billion from digital asset exchange Bybit in the largest-ever crypto exploit. 

In total, Tornado Cash has purportedly facilitated the laundering of more than $7 billion in illicit funds since the protocol was launched in 2019, according to the US Treasury.

In 2024, a Dutch court found Alexey Pertsev, one of Tornado Cash’s developers, guilty of money laundering and sentenced him to 64 months in prison. 

In February, Pertsev was released on house arrest, while he prepared an appeal of his conviction. 

The Ethereum Foundation has pledged to donate $1.25 million for Pertsev’s defense. 

“Privacy is normal, and writing code is not a crime,” the EF wrote in an X post while announcing the donation on Feb. 26.

Magazine: Did Telegram’s Pavel Durov commit a crime? Crypto lawyers weigh in

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Coin Market

US CISA adds ‘insane’ Linux Copy Fail flaw to watch list

Published

on

By

Malicious actors with code execution capability may gain root access on Linux systems using as few as 10 lines of Python, according to a researcher.

Continue Reading

Coin Market

Kraken parent Payward closes Bitnomial deal to expand US crypto derivatives

Published

on

By

The acquisition provides a fully licensed derivatives stack under CFTC oversight, covering trading, clearing and brokerage.

Continue Reading

Coin Market

Bitcoin mining stocks climb in 2026 as BTC lags behind

Published

on

By

All major mining stocks are up in 2026, with gains of up to 85% as Bitcoin remains down on the year.

Continue Reading

Trending