Crocodile of Wall Street Heather Morgan and husband Ilya Lichtenstein charged with money laundering
A married couple was busted in Manhattan on Tuesday for
allegedly trying to launder roughly $4.5 billion in cryptocurrency stolen
during a massive 2016 hack, federal prosecutors said.
Ilya “Dutch” Lichtenstein, 34, and his rapper wife, Heather
Morgan, 31, are accused of conspiring to wash the proceeds of 119,754 bitcoin
that were looted when a hacker breached the systems of virtual currency
exchange Bitfinex.
The stolen cryptocurrency was allegedly transferred to a
digital wallet controlled by Lichtenstein, who describes himself as a
“Technology entrepreneur, coder and investor” on his LinkedIn account.
He and his wife a self-professed “Serial Entrepreneur” and
“surrealist rap” creator then moved the funds to their accounts via “a
complicated money laundering process,” prosecutors said.
The couple allegedly spent the illegal proceeds on things
like gold, NFTs and a $500 Walmart gift card, according to the criminal
complaint unsealed Tuesday.
As part of the scheme, the duo allegedly “employed numerous
sophisticated laundering techniques” including setting up online accounts under
bogus identities and moving the money through the darknet, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors said the pair had a bag labeled “burner phones”
filled with cellphones inside their Manhattan apartment, and that Lichtenstein,
a dual Russia-US citizen, kept a file called “passport_ideas” on his computer.
The Justice Department said special agents were able to
recover over $3.6 billion in bitcoin stolen during the Bitfinex hack its
largest-ever financial seizure.
“Today’s arrests, and the department’s largest financial
seizure ever, show that cryptocurrency is not a safe haven for criminals,” said
Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco.
Bitfinex said it was working with the DOJ to “establish our
rights to a return of the stolen bitcoin.”
Lichtenstein and Morgan are facing charges of conspiring to
commit money laundering, as well as to defraud the US. If convicted of both
counts, they could each face a maximum sentence of 25 years.
The couple were married last year. They got engaged in 2019,
according to a Facebook post from Lichtenstein in which he said his bride was
“my best friend and the woman of my dreams” and “not just a tech entrepreneur”
but also a “fearless rapper.”
Morgan has released a number of rap songs under the alter
ego “Razzlekhan,” described as “like Genghis Khan, but with more pizzazz” on
her website. She also offers productivity tips, according to her Instagram.
In one bizarre 2019 music video titled “Rap Anthem for
Misfits & Weirdos: Versace Bedouin Music Video,” Morgan can be seen
bouncing around Wall Street in a gold jacket, leopard-print scarf, sunglasses
and hat with an entourage as she raps: “Come real far but I don’t know where
I’m headin’. I’m the motherf–ing crocodile of Wall Street.”
She’s also got a song called “Getting high in a cemetery”
that includes the lyric “I love me some grave grass.”
Magistrate Judge Debra Freeman set pre-trial release conditions for Lichtenstein and Morgan when the pair made their first appearance in a Lower Manhattan federal courtroom Tuesday evening.
Lichtenstein’s bond was set at $5 million, with his parents’
home posted as security, five co-signers and home incarceration with electronic
monitoring. Morgan’s bond was set at $3 million, with two co-signers and home
incarceration with electronic monitoring.
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