BitMEX Taunts Plaintiff: ‘Incorporated in Seychelles, Come at Me Bro'

Published at: June 10, 2020

The plaintiff in a lawsuit accusing BitMEX of market manipulation and operating without a license in the U.S. believes that Twilio possesses thousands of incriminating email records that prove their case.

The Bitcoin Manipulation Abatement LLC (BMA) has asked the court to preserve all  BitMEX-related email data held by the U.S. cloud communications platform, Twilio. BMA is concerned that without the order, BitMEX could delete all of the records. 

BMA filed a complaint in mid-May accusing BitMEX’s parent company, HDR Global Trading Ltd., of widespread crypto market manipulation and of being an unlicensed money transmission business in the U.S.

Speaking to Contelegraph, an HDR Global Trading Limited spokesperson dismissed the accusations, stating, “This is just another page from Mr Pogodin’s nuisance lawsuit playbook.  We are entirely confident the court will see his actions for what they are.”

BMA wants BitMEX emails preserved

In a filing published on June 9, BMA estimated that Twilio holds roughly 30,000 email records pertaining to BitMEX’s operations.

BMA’s general counsel Pavel Pogodin told Law 360 that "BitMEX uses Twilio to communicate with all its users on a daily basis”.

“Thus, according to BitMEX itself, Twilio stores a database of all BitMEX users' email addresses,” Pogodin said. “It was a mistake for them to use the U.S. company for this purpose and claim lack of personal jurisdiction of U.S. and California courts at the same time."

Bitcoin Manipulation Abatement describes HDR Global Trading as a Seychelles-based shell company that was set up to claim that BitMEX is not subject to United States law.

BMA’s filing claims that upon requesting information regarding the company’s operations, they were forwarded a meme with “incorporated in the Seychelles, come at me bro" written on an image of one of BitMEX’s founders.

According to BMA, the subtext of the “cynical” response indicated confidence that BitMEX could avoid U.S. jurisdiction through its Seychelles-based holding company.

BitMEX accused of unlicensed US operations

The filing states that BMA is seeking "to preserve a snapshot of information, including specific user email address data, which is evidence of defendants' contacts with the forum and evidence of defendants operating an unlicensed money transmission business in the United States”.

BMA states that Twilio had placed a “temporary deletion hold on BitMEX’s account” until June 15 while it would evaluate the plaintiff’s request for preservation — after which BitMEX will be able to delete all U.S.-based email data stored on Twilio.

In response to requests for assurance that the data will be preserved, BMA claims that Twilio “refused to acknowledge defendants’ duty to preserve the content of the user email database” and responded evasively.

BMA’s complaint alleges money laundering, wire fraud, and money transmission violation, asserting that BitMEX “was deliberately designed from ground up with the purpose to engage in, facilitate, aid, abet, counsel, induce and/or procure a myriad of illegal activities”.

Tags
Law
Related Posts
BREAKING: BitMEX will pay $100M in penalties to FinCEN, CFTC
Crypto derivatives exchange BitMEX has agreed to pay up to $100 million to resolve a case from the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission, or CFTC, and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN. In a Tuesday announcement, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York had entered a consent order for HDR Global Trading Limited, 100x Holding Limited, ABS Global Trading Limited, Shine Effort Inc Limited and HDR Global Services Limited to be charged with illegally operating the BitMEX platform. As part of the settlement with both the CFTC and …
Regulation / Aug. 10, 2021
Declaring a crackdown? What to make of the DoJ crypto framework release
The United States Attorney General’s Cyber-Digital Task Force recently unveiled the result of its months-long effort to evaluate emerging cryptocurrency-related threats and articulate law enforcement strategies for countering them. The resulting guidance leaves the reader with an impression that its authors have a sound understanding of how the focal asset class works as well as a certain fixation on the ways it can be misused, as some observers contend. In the highly charged atmosphere of the final weeks before the presidential election, with high-profile enforcement actions against the people behind crypto derivatives exchange BitMEX and the U.S. government’s sweeping anti-monopoly …
Blockchain / Nov. 1, 2020
Indictments issued for BitMEX senior team are a signal to all
On the morning of Oct. 1, the United States government authorities in New York issued indictments for four of the senior team of BitMEX, the famed “wild card” exchange based in Hong Kong. Despite that, the crypto exchange still continues to operate its services. BitMEX is one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges and has a reputation for being notoriously “relaxed” on Know Your Customer and ID procedures for its users — at least until mid-August of this year. Additionally, users are allowed a high withdrawal limit with little to no KYC. After doing some research, it is clear that …
Bitcoin / Oct. 3, 2020
Coinbase Adds Tax Support Resources for US Customers, Including TurboTax Integration
American cryptocurrency exchange and wallet service Coinbase has added resources for customers in the United States to claim crypto trades on their taxes, according to an official blog post on Jan. 24. In addition to adding an educational guide on crypto and taxes, Coinbase has also integrated with popular tax software TurboTax. According to the blog post, users of Coinbase.com and Coinbase Pro will be able to automatically import transactions into a new, crypto-specific section of TurboTax Premier. Coinbase says that it provided the new resources in order to make the platform easier to use after hearing confusion from the …
Blockchain / Jan. 25, 2019
Report: CEO of Largest Romanian Crypto Exchange Arrested on US Warrant
The CEO of Romania's largest crypto exchange Coinflux was reportedly arrested on a warrant from the United States for fraud, organized crime, and money laundering, local news outlet Mediafax reported Dec. 13. Coinflux has subsequently stopped all digital currency exchanges. Founded in 2015 in the Romanian city of Cluj, Coinflux is an online digital currency trading platform, with reportedly more than 200 million euro worth of Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Litecoin (LTC), and Ripple (XRP) in transactions. Vlad Nistor, the CEO and founder of Coinflux, was supposedly arrested on the territory of Romania upon the request of U.S. prosecutors. Nistor …
Blockchain / Dec. 15, 2018