NEW YORK (AFP) -
The
founder of an online underworld bank that allegedly laundered billions
of dollars for criminals was sentenced Friday to 20 years in prison.
Arthur
Budovsky, 42, had pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to commit
money laundering on January 29, three days before the scheduled start of
his trial in New York.
He was also ordered to pay a $500,000 fine
by US District Judge Denise L. Cote, who noted that Budovsky did not
express any "genuine remorse".
"The significant sentence handed
down today shows that money laundering through the use of virtual
currencies is still money laundering, and that online crime is still
crime," Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell for the Justice
Department?s Criminal Division said in a statement.
"Liberty
Reserve founder Arthur Budovsky ran a digital currency empire built
expressly to facilitate money laundering on a massive scale for
criminals around the globe," US Attorney Preet Bharara for the Southern
District of New York was quoted as saying.
Prosecutors said Costa
Rica-based Liberty Reserve operated an alternative digital currency that
helped cyber criminals around the world distribute, store and launder
the proceeds of illegal activity.
The company was a "financial
hub" for Ponzi scheme operators, credit card traffickers, identity
thieves, hackers and other criminals, authorities said.
The system
became operational in 2005. By the time it was shut down in 2013,
Liberty Reserve had more than 5.5 million user accounts, including more
than 600,000 in the United States, the US Department of Justice said.
Overall, it had processed more than 78 million financial transactions with a combined value of more than $8 billion.
The
digital exchange mechanism, which allowed depositors to mask their
identities, was similar to Bitcoin and other digital currencies.
Budovsky,
who was arrested in Spain in May 2013, had renounced his US citizenship
and acquired Costa Rica nationality in an apparent bid to avoid
prosecution.
As part of his plea agreement, Budovsky admitted to
laundering between $250 million and $550 million in criminal proceeds
linked to US-based Liberty Reserve accounts.
Six other people with ties to Liberty Reserve face charges in the case that involved police and investigators from 17 countries.
Co-defendants Maxim Chukharev and Mark Marmilev, who also pleaded guilty, were sentenced to three and five years respectively.
Two others are set to be sentenced on May 13, while another two remain at large.
© 2016 AFP
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