U.S. Democrats introduce bill to curb Russian crypto use amid Ukraine
crisis
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[March 18, 2022]
By Hannah Lang
(Reuters) - Democratic U.S. senators
introduced a bill on Thursday that would enable the president to
sanction foreign cryptocurrency firms doing business with sanctioned
Russian entities and prevent them from transacting with U.S. customers.
The Digital Asset Sanctions Compliance Act is led by Senator Elizabeth
Warren and co-sponsored by 10 other Democrats, including Senators Mark
Warner and Jon Tester.
While the bill is unlikely to become law anytime soon, it could ramp up
pressure on cryptocurrency exchanges, which have been on the defensive
amid concerns from some lawmakers like Warren that digital assets are
being used to circumvent a slew of Western sanctions imposed on Russia
following its invasion of Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin "and his cronies can move, store and
hide their wealth using cryptocurrencies, potentially allowing them to
evade the historic economic sanctions the U.S. and its partners across
the world have levied in response to Russia’s war against Ukraine,”
Warren said in a statement.
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Representations of cryptocurrencies Bitcoin, Ethereum, DogeCoin,
Ripple, Litecoin are placed on PC motherboard in this illustration
taken, June 29, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Biden administration officials have
said they do not believe Russia could use cryptocurrencies to
completely evade sanctions, citing the lack of liquidity in crypto
markets to facilitate high-volume transactions. Nevertheless, the
Treasury Department has emphasized that digital asset firms are
required to comply with the sanctions.
Warren’s bill would also allow the Treasury
secretary to block digital asset platforms operating in the United
States from transacting with any Russian crypto users, a step that
major crypto exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken have said they would
not take without a legal requirement.
The bill would also require the Treasury to publicly identify
foreign crypto trading platforms deemed to be at high risk for
sanctions evasion and money laundering, and would require U.S.
taxpayers to report any offshore crypto transactions exceeding
$10,000.
(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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