U.S. prosecutors are seeking to detain Reginald Fowler until his trial for operating an unlicensed money transmission business which may have processed funds for the Bitfinex crypto exchange.
In a court filing Wednesday â which was shared online but is not yet available on the governmentâs Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER) system â first assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Strange and assistant U.S. Attorney Gary Restaino detail concerns that Fowler may flee the country if he is not held in custody, citing his âdisregardâ for the FBIâs investigation last year.
Moreover, because âthis scheme involves a staggering amount of money,â the U.S. government believes that Fowler may be able to avoid prosecution by accessing funds around the world.
âThe government, through email search warrants, has obtained a document entitled âMaster US Workbook,â which details the financial operations of the scheme as of January 2019,â the filing says, adding:
âThis workbook indicates that the scheme had received over $740 million in 2018 alone. It lists approximately sixty different bank accounts, held at both domestic and international banks, with a combined account balance of over $345 million as of January 2019. Notably, this workbook indicates that approximately $50 million is held in domestic accounts, with the rest located abroad.â
Fowler was charged with bank fraud, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmission service earlier this week by the U.S Attorneyâs Office for the Southern District of New York.
Alongside an associate, Tel Aviv-based Ravid Yosef, Fowler is alleged to have provided cryptocurrency exchanges with banking services illicitly and may be an operator of Crypto Capital, the payment processor at the heart of the Bitfinex/Tether scandal.
Indeed, the U.S. Department of Justiceâs (DOJ) investigation may be one reason why Crypto Capitalâs funds were frozen, which in turn hampered Bitfinexâs ability to process its customersâ withdrawals.
It was Bitfinexâs loss of access to some $850 million through Crypto Capital which resulted in its taking out a $625 million loan from Tether, the stablecoin issuer it is closely affiliated with.
The filing appears to confirm this, noting that ârecent public reporting, which is corroborated in part through interviews conducted in the course of this investigation, indicates that companies associated with defendant have failed to return $851 million to a client of defendantâs shadow bank.â
Fowler may have also been involved in other crimes, the filing said. Roughly $14,000 in counterfeit bills â largely $100 bills â were recovered from Fowlerâs office, indicating that he may have been involved in producing counterfeit money.
âThus, it may be that this case is only one of multiple criminal and legal proceedings facing defendant,â the filing says.
Therefore, unless the prosecutors come to an agreement with Fowler with âa package of conditions,â his appearance at a hearing cannot be âreasonably assure[d],â and so he should be detained, Strange and Restaino wrote.
Fowler was arrested on April 30, and faces a maximum sentence of 30 years on the bank fraud charge.
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