Trump’s DOJ will no longer prosecute most cryptocurrency fraud cases

The Trump administration dissolves the Ministry of Justice unit devoted to the enforcement of fraud in the encrypted currency, and the end of what it calls “regulations with judicial prosecution.”
in note It was obtained by the Washington PostThe Deputy Prosecutor Todd Blanche directed the federal prosecutors to stop “litigation or enforcement procedures that have an impact on the composition of regulatory frameworks on digital assets.” The prosecutors have been informed of “no longer aimed at exchanging virtual currencies, mixing connected services and services, and not connected to the work of their final users or violations of regulations unintentionally.” Planch ordered the prosecutors to close the continuous investigations that are “inconsistent” with the new policy.
Per Per Blash’s Memo, which was circulated on Monday, the Ministry of Justice is declining from litigation and enforcement procedures “while the actual president of President Trump does this act outside the framework of punitive criminal justice.”
But Trump also expands the regulations outside the litigation. Trump’s Securities and Stock Exchange Committee dropped many investigations and lawsuits against companies that are claimed to have violated securities, including Robinhood and Coinbase. CEO of Robinhood Vlad Tenev 2 million dollars donated to install TrumpRobinhood narrates Mimi Trump’s currency to exchange it.
Instead of encryption platforms and exchanges, the Ministry of Justice will focus from Trump on the trial of individuals who strike the investors of digital assets, or those who use digital assets to enhance criminal crimes such as terrorism, drugs, human trafficking, organized crime, piracy, and cardamal financing.