Chatex Users Ask US Treasury to Release Crypto Frozen by Sanctions
When Ekaterina Abreu awakened on Nov. 9 at 5 a.m. in her
Russian home, she grabbed her phone and checked her cryptocurrency savings. Her
account in the Chatex app she used to buy and store crypto looked weird: The
balance of her XRP holdings was concealed.
Chatex support replied to her query, saying that they would
provide information later. “I thought, it can’t be good,” she said.
Bad news soon arrived.
The day before, the U.S. had announced sanctions against
Chatex, saying the crypto exchange had “facilitated transactions for multiple
ransomware variants” and worked with the over-the-counter trading (OTC) firm
Suex. Two months earlier, Suex had become the first crypto service to be
sanctioned by the U.S. government.
As a result, Chatex says it had to suspend withdrawals for
its 370,000 registered users. “Now I know I should have withdrawn my money
immediately, not wait until it gets frozen,” Abreu said.
At the time, Chatex’s customers encountered a unique
situation. But crypto users worldwide may soon face similar predicaments as
U.S. regulators, with their global reach, try to rein in the illegal use of
cryptocurrency. The prospects for these users to recover their money are
unclear, even if they are innocent of any wrongdoing.
Suex and Chatex shared a co-founder and investor, Egor
Petukhovsky, who has denied any wrongdoing and resigned from his Chatex
leadership position as damage control for the company he’s been promoting the
past several years.
It didn’t help. On Nov. 9, the U.S.Treasury’s Office of
Foreign (OFAC) sanctioned Chatex for “providing material support to Suex and
the threat posed by criminal ransomware actors.”
Chatex subsequently froze all withdrawals from its crypto
treasury consisting of non-custodial wallets the firm operated itself and
custodial ones hosted by the institutional crypto custodian firm BitGo.
At the time of publication, BitGo had not answered
CoinDesk’s questions.
While crypto is global, regulations are inconsistent around
the world, with some regions just catching up with stricter know-your-customer
and anti-money laundering (KYC/AML) trends. Companies that fail to prevent
criminals from using their platforms may not face traditional criminal
investigations in their home countries. But they may still be vulnerable to
U.S. Treasury Department sanctions – a sudden punishment from abroad.
Chatex says that it had over 370,000 registered users. Among
them is Alexander, a 35-year-old crypto trader who asked that his surname not
be used. (“They don’t like crypto traders here in Russia,” he explained.)
Chatex had multiple traders selling and buying crypto peer-to-peer, and a
user-friendly interface and API, he said. Chatex also added new coins faster
than most exchanges, so “you could change anything for anything,” Alexander
added.
But Alexander also noted that, while OFAC blacklisted only
30 blockchain addresses, all of Chatex’s crypto was blocked, including
Alexander’s coins.
Chatex co-founder Vladislav Bulochnikov told CoinDesk that a
lawyer advised the company that because of the sanctions, the exchange should
not touch any of its funds.
Specific license
U.S. authorities described Suex and Chatex as
money-laundering vehicles that processed crypto extorted from American
companies by some of the world’s most notorious ransomware gangs.
“Unprincipled virtual currency exchanges like Chatex are
critical to the profitability of ransomware activities, especially by
laundering and cashing out the proceeds for criminals,” the OFAC press release
said.
For Abreu, Chatex was just a handy mobile app to buy and
store her crypto savings. She would buy $30 to $50 worth of crypto every once
in a while just to earn a bit to buy her two children New Year’s gifts. After
the sanctions were imposed, Chatex locked $3,000 worth of her crypto, which she
wants back, she told CoinDesk in a phone interview.
Abreu, a lawyer who has lived in the U.S. for the past 10
years, decided to contact U.S. agencies about the situation and eventually
landed at OFAC’s doorstep. An OFAC officer who contacted her by phone was “shocked”
that Chatex even had legitimate users, Abreu said.
But he recommended that she apply for the so-called specific
license for the release of blocked funds – a special procedure designed for
innocent parties to get their funds back from sanctioned accounts.
An acquaintance told her there was a Telegram group of
Chatex users discussing what to do after their money ended up in a virtual
limbo created by the way U.S. sanctions, the crypto custody market and evolving
cryptocurrency regulations work.
The day after Abreu learned about the license and shared
this information with other users in the Telegram group, Chatex itself started
sharing the link for the application, Abreu said. In the ensuing days, some
people applied for a license, although it’s hard to determine a total.
However, several days after she completed the form on the
OFAC website, the agency wrote that it couldn’t locate the blocked funds. The
OFAC representative instructed Abreu to attach a Chatex confirmation that she
had stored her crypto on the platform, she said.
An OFAC media representative declined to comment for this
story, pointing to two short online posts it published about blocked
cryptocurrency accounts, one this year and the other in 2018.
An FAQ published Oct. 15 says that a U.S. crypto service
“may choose to block each virtual currency wallet or opt to consolidate wallets
that contain blocked virtual currency,” but that the service must ensure the
return of the crypto to the owner following OFAC approval.
Trapped coins
According to the analytics firm Crystal Blockchain, wallets
associated with Chatex hold over 5.3 BTC, 75 ETH, 218,000 USDT, 27,000 USDC and
multiple other tokens. An XRP wallet mentioned by OFAC contains 46,489 XRP and
is marked as BitGo’s custodial wallet in the XRPscan public blockchain
explorer.
As for the BTC wallets, most of the addresses listed by OFAC
are now empty, except one containing one bitcoin and another one with 0.007
BTC. The remaining bitcoins, which are not on the OFAC list, are blocked by
BitGo anyway, said Chatex co-founder Vlad Bulochnikov.
On the other hand, 12 of the 30 crypto wallets attributed to
Chatex on the OFAC list do not belong to the firm, Bulochnikov said. Those
addresses interacted with Chatex though, he told CoinDesk. “To some of them,
users withdrew to, and from others, they received funds [to their accounts with
Chatex],” he said.
Bulochnikov declined to point at specific addresses that he
said were erroneously attributed to Chatex.
Although blockchain analysis and attribution of addresses to
real-world entities can be tricky, OFAC approaches the task carefully, said Ari
Redbord, head of legal and government affairs at the blockchain sleuthing firm
TRM Labs and a U.S. Treasury alum. “I can tell you from my experience at Treasury
that OFAC designations involve tremendous intelligence gathering, investigation
and deliberation,” Redbord said.
Tom Robinson, co-founder of another crypto analytics firm,
Elliptic, agrees: “My understanding is that OFAC typically requires pretty
robust evidence before linking addresses to sanctioned actors,” Robinson told
CoinDesk.
After the sanctions were imposed, Chatex’s team offered
users a detailed explanation of why their funds had been frozen, on its main
page. According to Chatex, BitGo blocked some of the funds and Chatex itself
froze the other part because these funds might face sanctions.
Lawyers from the U.S. firm Ferrari and Associates, which
specializes in cases involving U.S. economic sanctions, have advised Chatex not
to touch any funds while the company is sorting things out with OFAC,
Bulochnikov said.
BitGo currently custodies bitcoin, XRP and some other
cryptocurrencies of Chatex’s users, Chatex said in its announcement, and all
unspent transaction outputs are frozen “at the moment of sanctions’
appearance.” On the other hand, Chatex has direct control over wallets storing
ether, TRON and tokens based on these two blockchains with many of these not
included on the sanctions list.
However, “the movement of these funds will lead to their
subsequent blocking on any other exchange,” Chatex said in the announcement.
The company added that it’s trying to get a license from OFAC for the entirety
of Chatex’s funds to be released, but also encouraged users to apply for
individual licenses.
“But, more importantly, back then this procedure was
applicable only to fiat structures. For instance, you have to fill in the
recipient bank and the sending bank. Now we should adapt this procedure to our
situation in order to be available to work with crypto,” the announcement said.
In a later update, published in Chatex’ Telegram channel on
Dec. 8, the team said it was going to apply for a license to get its crypto
released the following week.
Erich Ferrari, principal attorney of Ferrari and Associates,
confirmed to CoinDesk that the firm was working with Chatex. He declined to
comment on Chatex’s case in detail but said that “OFAC frequently uses its
licensing authority to allow for certain transactions that would otherwise be
prohibited by the sanctions.”
“It does this to minimize economic damage to innocent
parties (e.g., in issuing wind down licenses), as well as when it furthers U.S.
economic, foreign policy and national security objectives to do so,” Ferrari
added.
Grim prospects
The sanctions hit Chatex hard. Hours after the announcement,
all U.S. and European companies upon which Chatex has been relying stopped
working with it and cut any communications, Bulochnikov said.
This list included BitGo, which immediately froze Chatex’s
BTC, XRP and other wallets; blockchain analytics provider Crystal Blockchain,
which Chatex used for compliance; London-based KYC provider Sum and Substance;
web services company CloudFlare; and even Google. The Chatex team lost access
to their business email accounts and cloud services, Bulochnikov said.
No longer able to operate, Chatex laid off almost the entire
workforce the day after the sanctions, Bulochnikov said. He added that, in
theory, Chatex could use its recovery option for the BitGo wallets; however,
the mechanics of the recovery procedure would require Chatex to move all its
bitcoin at the same time, including the blacklisted coins, which the company
cannot do.
Benjamin Hutten, counsel at the law firm Buckley LLP, says
Chatex users won’t have an easy time retrieving their crypto from the frozen
wallets, particularly because of Chatex’s ties to Suex, which OFAC believes is
involved in ransomware money laundering.
“And as OFAC’s actions against Chatex are part of a
government-wide crackdown on ransomware, any application to release funds will
be scrutinized very closely,” Hutten told CoinDesk, adding that “most Chatex
users are unlikely to see the release of their assets in the near future, if at
all.”
“It seems very unlikely that OFAC would simply allow Chatex
to return funds to users,” Hutten added, because “OFAC typically imposes
multiple conditions and limitations on any license it grants, and it is hard to
see how it would trust Chatex to determine whether a user could meet the
conditions and limitations that OFAC would impose on any release of funds.”
Regarding individual applications, OFAC might want to know
why and for what purposes people used Chatex, Hutten said. “OFAC would have to
be certain that the use of Chatex was for legitimate purposes, which is likely
to be a tall task given its finding that more than half of the transactions
that the exchange facilitated involved illicit or high-risk activities –
including ransomware payments,” he said.
Abreu is pessimistic that she will be able to claw back her
crypto from the OFAC freezer. So far, both OFAC and BitGo have told users they
could not locate their funds. Abreu believes that’s because individual users
have been neither sanctioned by OFAC, nor blocked by BitGo.
However, Abreu is determined to make Chatex pay, even if
OFAC does not help the users, through the Russian and European justice system.
She told CoinDesk that over the past two weeks she has reported the situation
to the national prosecutor’s offices in Russia and in Estonia, where Chatex is
registered.
“We must not get affected by these sanctions,” she said.
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