November 9, 2024

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CFTC chair says Binance intentionally broke rules concerning futures, commodities

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CFTC chair says Binance intentionally broke rules concerning futures, commodities

Rostin Behnam, Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), recently spoke out about the allegations levied against Binance, claiming that the beleaguered cryptocurrency exchange’s leadership knowingly operated outside of U.S. laws governing the exchange of commodities and futures. 

Speaking at a fireside chat that took place at the DeCenter Spring Conference at Princeton University on April 14, Bloomberg reports that Behnam told those in attendance that Binance leaders had intentionally flouted the rules concerning operations, including knowingly allowing U.S. citizens to participate on the exchange through the use of virtual private networks (VPNs) and other obfuscation tools.

“These are not unsophisticated individuals,” Behnam said at the event. “They are starting large companies and offering futures contracts and derivatives to U.S. customers.” The CFTC head later added “If you are going to offer futures contracts in the U.S., there is a clear understanding that you are registered with the CFTC and comply by the law.”

The comments stem from the CFTC’s lawsuit against Binance and its CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao for alleged trading violations. Per a report from Cointelegraph, “The CFTC is pressing seven counts for executing unregistered futures transactions, providing illegal commodities options, failure to register as a Futures Commission Merchant, Designated Contract Market or Swap Execution Facility, failure to supervise diligently or implement AML/KYC measures and law evasion.”

Related: Binance CEO CZ: Regulators need deep understanding of crypto for proper rules

The nuts and bolts of the CFTC’s suit against Binance — the exchange also faces legal action from the IRS and federal prosecutors — relies on supposed evidence that Binance and CZ continued onboarding U.S. customers despite a policy prohibiting such actions and that the company knowingly engaged in illegal futures trading, allegedly running the business afoul of U.S. anti-money-laundering laws.

It’s unclear at this time why the CFTC head would participate in what appears to be flippant public discussion of ongoing investigations. Binance, for its part, continues to assert its participation in good-faith efforts at global compliance.