The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has clarified that it will not pursue charges against Dragonfly Ventures over the firm’s early investment in Tornado Cash, a crypto-mixing protocol currently under legal scrutiny.
On Friday, the DOJ had publicly suggested the possibility of prosecuting Dragonfly as part of its broader probe into Tornado Cash’s activities, a statement that Qureshi described as both unusual and inconsistent with DOJ guidelines.
“This type of public statement can have broader implications,” Qureshi said in his post. “It could discourage investment in blockchain and privacy-focused technologies if investors fear they may face prosecution for funding open-source development.”
He added that the DOJ’s comments initially appeared aimed at discouraging Dragonfly representatives from testifying in support of the defense in the ongoing Tornado Cash trial.
Tornado Cash, like other privacy-enhancing tools, has been a point of contention between developers advocating for open-source financial privacy and regulators concerned about money laundering and sanctions evasion.
The DOJ’s decision to clarify its stance has been welcomed by members of the venture capital and blockchain communities, many of whom expressed concerns about the potential chilling effect such legal threats could have on funding privacy-preserving technologies.
With the DOJ now stating it will not pursue Dragonfly, attention has shifted back to Roman Storm’s trial, which could reach closing arguments later this week.
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