Crypto scammers plague Estonia’s e-residency program

Published at: Sept. 28, 2020

The e-residency program of Estonia is now under the local regulator’s radar as foreigners registered as e-residents of the Baltic nation are being linked to cryptocurrency frauds. 

The local police’s Financial Intelligence Unit has discovered that overseas companies owned by e-residents of Estonia have been involved in multiple large-scale exit scams.

Regulators also suspect that Estonian firms and e-residents were involved in organizing initial coin offering scams, according to the police report cited by Bloomberg.

This comes only three months after the crypto-friendly nation became the epicenter of a $220 billion money laundering scandal. Estonian regulators immediately revoked the licenses of more than 500 crypto companies as a response to the scam. Today, only 353 companies own a crypto license in Estonia while 1,234 companies did so at the end of 2019.

While the scandal had already caused enough damage to Estonia’s digitization endeavors, the involvement of its e-residents in crypto scams is expected to worsen its reputation.

Former Estonian Prime Minister Taavi Roivas has previously told Cointelegraph that the e-residency program was one of the measures to help the country effectively reboot from 50 years of Soviet occupation. He had said that digitizing things rather than relying on paper files was a logical start and that was where the idea of e-residency stemmed from.

The government launched the program in 2014 to offer Estonian citizenship to anyone irrespective of where they were actually located. 

Following the launch, the British senior editor at the Economist, Edward Lucas, became the first e-resident of Estonia. Many other well-known names from across the world followed suit,  including venture capitalists such as Tim Draper, Guy Kawasaki and Ben Horowitz. Japan’s former prime minister Shinzo Abe and the German Chancellor Angela Merkel also later became e-residents of the country. So far, there are close to 70,000 Estonian e-residents.

The e-residency team is now working together with the police and the Financial Intelligence Unit to unravel the case and win back trust in the e-residency system.

Tags
Law
Related Posts
The Great Estonian Exodus — Crypto Firms Are Leaving Estonia
Back in 2017, the Estonian government rocked the legislative side of the crypto world when they introduced a raft of new laws designed to support crypto projects. These licenses split into two different categories: those looking to operate a crypto exchange and those looking to undertake an initial coin offering. Both company types stood to benefit from the first “real” cryptocurrency licenses anywhere on the planet. As a result of these licenses, entrepreneurs digitally flocked to the small but great Baltic nation. The Estonian government was ahead in a number of ways. Not only was the country a trailblazer with …
Technology / June 27, 2020
Estonia's crypto honeymoon at an end as stricter regulations loom
Estonia’s finance ministry is reportedly looking to enact stricter crypto licensing regulations. This comes after the authorities revoked the licenses of about two-thirds of the cryptocurrency businesses operating in the country back in 2020. According to ERR News, the Estonian Ministry of Finance issued draft legislation back in January to tighten the noose on the country’s crypto industry. As part of the proposed rule changes, the Finantsinspektsioon — Estonia’s Financial Supervisory Authority — will oversee the regulation of cryptocurrency businesses instead of the Financial Intelligence Unit. This change will bring crypto oversight under the purview of financial regulators as against …
Regulation / Feb. 5, 2021
How Not to Lose Your Cryptocurrency License in Estonia
Recently, there have been discussions regarding Estonia’s new law on cryptocurrency, the revocation of 500 crypto licenses in Estonia, and companies exiting from Estonian regulatory jurisdiction. Let’s focus on three major recommendations. Do your research before engaging with a legal partner in Estonia Yes, it might sound odd, but I think one of the reasons why companies have been losing their crypto licenses is some consulting companies. I won’t mention specific firms, but I am aware that some consulting companies conduct very aggressive marketing, spamming their adverts for a single reason — to sell a “ready company” with licenses and, …
Blockchain / Aug. 2, 2020
Fan Token Platform Socios Secures Key Regulatory License
Socios.com, a blockchain startup aiming to tokenize the sports industry, has secured a major regulatory license allowing it to issue its own payments and loyalty card. Issued by the Estonian Financial Intelligence Unit, or FIU, the new license has been granted to the new Estonia-based entity called Socios Entertainment OU. Announcing the news on July 30, Socios’ partner project Chiliz.net noted that the FIU is the responsible authority for licensing crypto-related firms in the country. Socios’ prepaid fiat-crypto card is “due in the very near future” The new license allows Socios to provide virtual currency and fiat exchange services and …
Regulation / July 30, 2020
Dubai financial regulator working on regulations for cryptocurrencies
The Dubai Financial Services Authority, the financial regulatory agency for the special economic zone, the Dubai International Financial Centre, is looking to enhance local cryptocurrency-related regulations. The DFSA is planning to introduce a regulatory framework for diverse digital assets as part of its 2021–2022 business plan released on Jan. 18. According to the DFSA, the upcoming crypto framework will further expand the DFSA’s regulation of digital asset issuers and associated trading platforms. The framework will include a number of digital asset types like tokenized securities and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC): “We will build upon recent achievements in this space over …
Bitcoin / Jan. 19, 2021