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Bitcoin Crime The Almighty Buck United Kingdom

Woman With $2.5 Billion In Bitcoin Convicted of Money Laundering (bbc.co.uk) 70

mrspoonsi shares a report from the BBC: A former takeaway worker found with Bitcoin worth more than $2.5 billion has been convicted at Southwark Crown Court of a crime linked to money laundering. Jian Wen, 42, from Hendon in north London, was involved in converting the currency into assets including multi-million-pound houses and jewelry. On Monday she was convicted of entering into or becoming concerned in a money laundering arrangement. The Met said the seizure is the largest of its kind in the UK.

Although Wen was living in a flat above a Chinese restaurant in Leeds when she became involved in the criminal activity, her new lifestyle saw her move into a six-bedroom house in north London in 2017 which was rented for more than $21,000 per month. She posed as an employee of an international jewelry business and moved her son to the UK to attend private school, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said. That same year, Wen tried to buy a string of expensive houses in London, but struggled to pass money-laundering checks and her claims she had earned millions legitimately mining Bitcoin were not believed. She later travelled abroad, buying jewelry worth tens of thousands of pounds in Zurich, and purchasing properties in Dubai in 2019.

Another suspect is thought to be behind the fraud but they remain at large. The Met said it carried out a large scale investigation as part of the case - searching several addresses, reviewing 48 electronic devices, and examining thousands of digital files including many which were translated from Mandarin. The CPS has obtained a freezing order from the High Court, while it carries out a civil recovery investigation that could lead to the forfeiture of the Bitcoin. The value of the Bitcoin was worth around $2.5 billion at the time of initial estimates -- but due to the fluctuation in the currency's value, it has since increased to around $4.3 billion.

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Woman With $2.5 Billion In Bitcoin Convicted of Money Laundering

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  • multi-million-pound houses

    That seems like a very weird way to quantify a house. Also seems like a lot, according to Quora the average suburban house only weighs 240,000-360,000 pounds.

    • You focused on that and completely ignored her jewelry hoard horad with that weighed millions of pounds? Like she was a dragon.

      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
        At least the weight kind of "pounds" is a reasonable measure for jewelry as well as the money kind. And, to be fair, if you read it in the horrible dad-joke style humor, "multi-million-pound houses and jewelry" doesn't really quantify the jewelry. You have "multi-million-pound houses", as in more than one very heavy house, and some amount of jewelry. I'll show myself out now.
      • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @10:20PM (#64332487)

        From TFA: 'Jian "Smaug" Wen, 42, from Hendon in north London, ...'

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Thursday March 21, 2024 @05:18AM (#64332899)

        More like a CCP apparatchik caught moving corrupt money. I still remember the hilarious case when Chinese authorities grabbed one of them before he could move it out, so much cash at home they had to use trucks to move it out. Literally tons upon tons of cash in weight.

        This is almost certainly same shit. Corrupt Chinese money trying to get the fuck out of PRC using mules like this woman. They get nabbed occasionally, but most of it gets past the authorities.

        Stories of "Chinese nationals showing up with suitcase of cash to buy your house" has been a thing in a lot of nations with strong rule of law and protection of property. Chinese upper class have been running scared shitless that anti-corruption campaign gets to each of them, and have been trying to get the money out for close to a decade in increasingly weird and desperate ways. And a few years ago when Hong Kong got finally taken over by PRC, most of the insurance scams and other similar HK paths to get money out dried up, so they moved up to bitcoin.

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @09:24PM (#64332409)

      the average suburban house only weighs 240,000-360,000 pounds.

      But being in the UK, what would that be in stone?

      • No. Stones (and the remainder pounds) are only for human weight.
        Use of pounds for the weight of anything else has long been defunct in the UK. I can't think of any exceptions - maybe there are some. Even for human weight, its use is fading out in favour of kg.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        One, if it's big enough.

        (Thanks, I'll be here all night, don't forget to wait for your tipster.)

    • by Bob_Who ( 926234 )

      multi-million-pound houses

      That seems like a very weird way to quantify a house.

      Tally- Ho! Its Europe so they should be talking Kilograms....duh.

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        multi-million-pound houses

        That seems like a very weird way to quantify a house.

        Tally- Ho! Its Europe so they should be talking Kilograms....duh.

        Help me out, though, because I'm a dumb American: how many Royale with Cheese [youtube.com] is that?

  • The value of the Bitcoin was worth around $2.5 billion at the time of initial estimates -- but due to the fluctuation in the currency's value, it has since increased to around $4.3 billion.

    By simply retaining $2.4 billion and using the hundred million as grease she wouldn’t have been suspected of a thing. Or better yet, doing as she partially did in the first place, buying assets in countries that don’t ask embarrassing questions. Then when things have settled down doing some property exchanges.

  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @09:16PM (#64332393) Homepage Journal

    I would start my own bank. Then make money off bridge loans.

    • Rookie mistake. Buy a number of failing regional banks and recapitalize them. Be sure to solicit local wealthy land owners for refinancing and home improvement loans. It's a fail to buy things in your own name. Always create shell corps!
  • Options (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    With all the things you can do with Bitcoin, they chose to launder. Why didn't they use their Bitcoin to... wait... what else can Bitcoin be used for?

  • by mkwan ( 2589113 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2024 @09:49PM (#64332447)
    If I was her, I'd knock up some monkey GIFs in midjourney, list them on an NFT exchange, then buy them off myself via an anonymous wallet for a few million each. Legitimate income! You pay income tax on the revenue, then you're clear.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Buying something Off yourself Or entering other transactions with the Purpose and Intention of disguising the source of funds is the Literal definition of money laundering, the crime she's been alleged to have committed

  • by PubJeezy ( 10299395 ) on Thursday March 21, 2024 @12:36AM (#64332639)
    Crypto has no legitimate use-case at scale. It never has and never will.

    The second any crypto related business adds Know Your Customer procedures to their platform, 90% of transactions immediately disappear. And this is generally followed by a series of indictments.

    Small time, organic users of crypto are being tricked into becoming packing peanuts meant to protect the real "users" in the crypto space: cartel money launderers like Jian Wen.

    Crypto is marketing euphemism for a specific type of criminal enterprise. It has no legitimacy and cannot be a productive business model.
  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday March 21, 2024 @04:01AM (#64332839) Homepage

    I mean, if she had $2.5 billion in Bitcoin, all she needed to do was convert it bit-by-bit into fiat currency. Then live the good life. Zero need to start handling shady transactions for other people.

    I suppose the real question is: where did she get $2.5 billion in Bitcoin. She seems an unlike person to have run a mining rig in the early days, where that was possible. OTOH, if she is the front person for a criminal organization it seems unlikely that she would have been allowed to be so flagrant: buying houses, jewelry, etc..

    • You're assuming that $2.5 billion in bitcoin was hers. Hint 1: Money launderers are not normally filthy rich in their own right, they often just get caught with other people's money. Hint 2: It's crypto. Most cases related to crime are due to misshandling the money of others.

  • So they stole it, called it Money Laundering, the trained seals clapped, the rich get richer.

    Any money you do not immediately remit to the government could be considered laundered by the government.

    What exactly was her crime? Notice they do not exactly say? They just repeat money laundering a bunch of times, and that is it. Because she bought stuff with bitcoin.

    She was robbed by the state who noticed the big sums and decided to take it for their own.

    Yay! Freedom.

  • Stupid people do stupid things like live WAY above their means when they are laundering money. But governments never mind seizing someone else's assets (legitimate or not) and squandering it away on toys and/or additional bureaucratic clutter. I'm not sure who the bigger criminal is. Both are stupid, wasteful spenders of ill gotten gains.
  • in this case, turned into a syphoning machine to enrich those at the receiving end of the fine

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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