Roger Ver, the early Bitcoin promoter often called “Bitcoin Jesus,” has reached what reports describe as a tentative deal to resolve a US criminal tax case by paying about $48 million.
The agreement has not been filed with the judge, and legal observers say the judge could change parts of it or reject it. Extradition and earlier arrest actions remain part of the case’s public record.
Ver was arrested in Spain after the indictment was unsealed in April 2024 and US authorities later sought his transfer.
According to The New York Times, Roger Ver, known as “Bitcoin Jesus,” has agreed to pay $48 million under a deferred prosecution deal with the U.S. Department of Justice to settle a tax evasion case. He reportedly paid $600,000 to Trump ally Roger Stone and hired lawyers and…
That stash was valued at about $114 million in the filings, prosecutors say, and they applied rules about expatriation that treat assets as if they were sold the day before someone renounces citizenship.
The government’s math led to an asserted tax liability of roughly $48 million for the years in question.
Charges in the case include tax-related counts and mail fraud, based on accusations that Ver underreported personal holdings and downplayed distributions from firms he controlled. Those charges remain on the public docket until any court signs off on a final settlement.
Reports have disclosed that Ver hired lawyers with ties to high-profile Bitcoin and political figures. Media outlets also say he paid $600,000 to Trump ally Roger Stone as part of lobbying efforts, and those payments have drawn attention from commentators on both sides of the political aisle.
Some observers are watching whether political connections affect how crypto enforcement is handled under US President Donald Trump’s administration, while others urge caution and point to the need for legal facts to guide any conclusion.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView