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Twister mixer dropped from US blacklist


The US Treasury Division has dropped cryptocurrency mixer Twister Money from its sanctions listing, the company mentioned on March 21. 

The elimination follows a January ruling by a US appeals court, which mentioned the Treasury’s Workplace of Overseas Property Management (OFAC) can not sanction Twister’s good contracts as a result of they don't seem to be the property of any international nationwide. 

In line with the January courtroom ruling, “Twister Money’s immutable good contracts (the traces of privacy-enabling software program code) usually are not the ‘property’ of a international nationwide or entity, that means […] OFAC overstepped its congressionally outlined authority.”

In a March 21 statement, the Treasury mentioned OFAC eliminated a number of dozen Twister-affiliated good contract addresses on the Ethereum blockchain community from its sanctions listing. 

Twister’s native token, Twister Money (TORN), is up round 60% on the information, in response to data from CoinMarketCap. 

As of March 21, TORN has a market capitalization of round $73 million and a totally diluted worth (FDV) of practically $140 million, the info exhibits. 

OFAC is the Treasury’s workplace for administering financial and commerce sanctions on states and international nationals.

Twister Money lets customers pool crypto deposits right into a mixer after which withdraw it later to totally different pockets addresses, making the unique funding supply tough to trace.

TORN is up round 60% on the information. Supply: CoinMarketCap

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Cash laundering allegations

In August 2022, OFAC sanctioned Twister Money after alleging the blockchain protocol helped launder cryptocurrency stolen by Lazarus Group, a North Korean hacking outfit. 

Lazarus Group has allegedly stolen billions of {dollars} in crypto by varied cyberattacks.

In February, Lazarus was accused of pilfering $1.4 billion from digital asset exchange Bybit within the largest-ever crypto exploit.