News Business: Treasury Dodges Questions From Congressman Over Tornado Cash Republican Tom Emmer asked for clarity on the ban last August—but the Treasury Department says a lawsuit prevents it from answering. #News - #Business #Crypto #NFT #DeFi

The Treasury Department has refused to answer a Republican lawmaker’s questions about the blacklisting of coin mixer Tornado Cash. Congressman Tom Emmer (MN-06) wrote a letter to the Department of the Treasury five months ago asking a number of questions surrounding its Tornado Cash ban, noting that “technology is neutral, and the expectation of privacy is normal.” Tornado Cash is a popular “coin mixer” app that allows people to anonymously send and receive Ethereum, the second biggest digital asset by market cap. But the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) banned U.S. citizens from using it last August, claiming that criminals were using it to launder dirty funds. “Because Tornado Cash remains the subject of active litigation, it would not be appropriate for Treasury to comment further on the entity’s designation at this time,” Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs at the Treasury Jonathan Davidson said in a Monday letter to Emmer, posted by the Republican lawmaker today. Emmer responded by saying in a tweet that tools like Tornado Cash are necessary for crypto transactions in order to preserve the same kind of privacy people expect from cash. He called the Treasury’s move to ban the app a “destructive policy decision.” The congressman had initially asked Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to explain why the department had sanctioned a decentralized app—rather than a centralized entity operated by people—and pointed out that anonymizing software isn’t “subject to Bank Secrecy Act obligations.” He also pointed out that it wasn’t practical to sanction people who received Ethereum unwillingly from someone else using the app (a point proven when an anonymous troll sent celebrities with Ethereum wallets the anonymized cryptocurrency.) The Treasury Department did since clarify, however, that it would not seek to punish people who were "dusted" with cryptocurrency linked to Tornado Cash and would provide a legal avenue for individuals to withdraw funds from the platform without running afoul of sanctions. When the Feds decided to ban Tornado Cash in August of last year, it sent many in the crypto community up in arms. Coinbase, the biggest digital asset exchange in the U.S., is funding a lawsuit against the Treasury Department for the move, claiming the ban is “punishing people who did nothing wrong and results in people having less privacy and security.” Authorities claim the app was being used by North Korean state-sponsored hacking group Lazarus Group as a go-to tool for obscuring stolen funds. The Feds first said that over $7 billion-worth of dirty digital cash passed through Tornado since its creation in 2019. Blockchain data company Elliptic, however, later claimed in a report that only $1.5 billion of $7.6 billion that passed through the app was from illegal activity. By Mat Di Salvo, Jan 11, 2023, https://decrypt.co/118949/treasury-questions-congressman-emmer-tornado-cash

vya4slav's Recent Blog Posts

Crypto lender Genesis tried to raise a $1 billion loan from investors to avoid a “liquidity crunch” driven by the fallout from crypto exchange FTX’s collapse, according to a Wall Street Journal…
1 year ago
El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele announced that the Central American nation will begin purchasing one Bitcoin (BTC) every day. The announcement comes three and half months after El…
1 year ago
While non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are often associated with JPEG images, their real-world use cases continue to grow. As interest in digital collectibles surged last year, much of the focus was on…
1 year ago
Bored Ape Yacht Club hype was in full swing earlier this year as celebrities “aped into” the pricey Ethereum NFT collection. Some have even used their Apes to create products, themed restaurants,…
1 year ago
The FTX crisis has rocked the crypto landscape over the past couple of weeks. Here's a summary of what happened and how it has affected the industry as a whole. FTX began 2022 as the third-…
1 year ago