News

Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm is set to stand trial on Monday in the Southern District of New York (SDNY) on federal charges that could put him behind bars for more than 40 years.
Venture capital firm Paradigm has filed an amicus brief in support of Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm, arguing the jury needs to be properly briefed on the law’s definition of what operating ...
Roman Storm, creator of the crypto-anonymizing tool Tornado Cash, goes on trial in NYC on Monday. The DOJ says he helped launder more than $1B in criminal proceeds, including for North Korea.
US federal prosecutors are pressing ahead with their case against Tornado Cash founder Roman Storm, but will drop a small part of their indictment after the Department of Justice rolled back its ...
The prosecution’s case is, essentially, this: Roman Storm, along with his colleagues and alleged co-conspirators, Roman Semenov and Alexey Pertsev, owned and controlled Tornado Cash.
Today, during the second day of the Tornado Cash trial, the prosecution and defense provided opposing accounts in their opening statements for why the defendant in the case, Roman Storm, started ...
A government witness in the trial of Roman Storm will testify about whether the Tornado Cash co-founder could have added features to prevent criminal use of the mixing service.
Roman Storm is on trial for allegedly facilitating money laundering through the crypto tool Tornado Cash, which was used by criminals, including North Korea's Lazarus Group. Prosecutors argue ...
Tornado Cash's Roman Storm, second from left, and his legal team – Brian Klein (left), Keri Axel and Kevin Casey – outside court in New York. (Nikhilesh De/CoinDesk) Read More ...
Tornado Cash founder Roman Storm is fighting money-laundering charges in federal court in Manhattan. On Wednesday, a convicted NFT scammer testified he used Tornado Cash to launder $1M at age 20.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, is responsible for the crypto "mixing" service. He is charged with laundering more than $1 billion in dirty cash—money linked to North Korean hackers.
The hearing was held virtually, and attendees included Judge Katherine Polk Failla (the judge presiding over the trial), Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm, and members of the defense and prosecution ...