
NEW YORK, New York — The U.S. Treasury Division’s Workplace of Overseas Asset Management’s (OFAC) sanctions in opposition to privateness software Twister Money can’t be mentioned on the upcoming trial of developer Roman Storm, a federal decide dominated Tuesday.
At a standing convention in Manhattan on Tuesday, District Choose Katherine Polk Failla initially waffled on whether or not she would permit professional witnesses to testify concerning the sanctions, which have been initially imposed in August 2022, eliminated this March and subsequently discovered unlawful by a Texas court docket.
After listening to arguments from each the prosecution and the protection, Failla determined to grant Storm’s movement in limine shifting to ban testimony concerning the sanctions completely, arguing that it might merely be too complicated for a jury to do what she described because the “psychological gymnastics” of understanding why the sanctions have been imposed and finally eliminated.
“I’m going to preclude references to the August 2022 OFAC sanctions,” Failla stated, with the caveat that she was leaving open the potential of a “unicorn doc” — a key piece of proof for the prosecution that hinged on Storm’s alleged conduct after the sanctions have been imposed — that might change her thoughts earlier than the trial begins. Failla gave prosecutors till Wednesday to submit any such piece of proof. The decide had dominated earlier Tuesday that the events wouldn’t be allowed to debate the Van Loon v. Treasury Division case which finally led to the sanctions being dropped.
The remainder of Storm’s motions in limine (a sort of pretrial movement to exclude sure proof or arguments from being allowed throughout trial) have been denied, together with a movement to preclude references to North Korea’s state sanctioned hacking group, the Lazarus Group, and a movement to preclude “inflammatory characterizations” of Storm’s TORN gross sales. Earlier within the day, prosecutors stated they deliberate to introduce proof demonstrating that Storm profited handsomely from his involvement in Twister Money, together with allegedly buying a number of houses and promoting $12 million price of TORN tokens after OFAC sanctioned Twister Money.
Prosecutors stated they don’t plan to argue at trial that Storm violated the Financial institution Secrecy Act (BSA) by not implementing a know-your-customer/anti-money laundering protocol for Twister Money, solely to precise by means of their professional witness testimony that he might have and selected to not.
Failla additionally dominated to permit the federal government to provide proof from Storm’s fellow Twister Money developer Alexey Pertsev’s telephone. The Dutch authorities allowed a U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent to view a report of the contents of Pertsev’s telephone, from which the agent made his personal report with chosen items of data. Storm’s protection tried to get the Pertsev telephone proof tossed out, arguing that the report was cherry-picked and unattainable to authenticate, however the decide sided with the prosecution, ruling that the report was admissible.
After a lot backwards and forwards between the events over their respective professional witnesses, Failla dominated that all the witnesses might testify, although she put some guardrails on sure witnesses for each side.
It isn’t but clear whether or not Storm will testify in his personal protection, although Failla stated Tuesday that, ought to he take the stand, he won’t be permitted to argue that he had First Modification protections in his work with Twister Money.
Failla stated that Storm was free to debate his perception in privateness rights, however stated: “I don’t assume free speech or First Modification rights ought to come up at this trial.”
A remaining pre-trial convention shall be held telephonically at 3 pm ET on Friday. Storm’s trial is slated to start June 14 and is predicted to run for 4 weeks.