A report that circulates online has it that a US District
Judge, Alison Nathan affirmed that the virtual currency met the definition of
money. Read the report below.
Bitcoin qualifies as money, a federal judge ruled on
Monday, in a decision linked to a criminal case over hacking attacks against JPMorgan
Chase & Co and
other companies.
U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan in
Manhattan rejected a bid by Anthony Murgio to dismiss two charges related to
his alleged operation of Coin.mx, which prosecutors have called an unlicensed
bitcoin exchange.
Murgio had argued that bitcoin did
not qualify as "funds" under the federal law prohibiting the
operation of unlicensed money transmitting businesses.
But the judge, like her colleague Jed Rakoff
in an unrelated 2014 case, said the virtual currency met that definition.
Read: How much money in the world
"Bitcoins
are funds within the plain meaning of that term," Nathan wrote.
"Bitcoins can be accepted as a payment for goods and services or bought
directly from an exchange with a bank account. They therefore function as
pecuniary resources and are used as a medium of exchange and a means of
payment."
The
decision did not address six other criminal counts that Murgio faces, Nathan
wrote.
Brian
Klein, a lawyer for Murgio, said he disagreed with the decision.
"Anthony
Murgio maintains his innocence and looks forward to clearing his name at his
upcoming trial," he added.
Prosecutors
last year charged Murgio over the operation of Coin.mx, and in April charged his
father Michael with participating in bribery aimed at supporting it.
Authorities
have said Coin.mx was owned by Gery Shalon, an Israeli man who, along with two
others, was charged with running a sprawling computer hacking and fraud scheme
targeting a dozen companies, including JPMorgan, and exposing personal data of
more than 100 million people.
That
alleged scheme generated hundreds of millions of dollars of profit through
pumping up stock prices, online casinos, money laundering and other illegal
activity, prosecutors have said.
Shalon
has pleaded not guilty, and is being held at the Metropolitan Correctional
Center in Manhattan. He hired new lawyers last month and is seeking permission
to replace lawyers who joined the case in June, a Monday court filing showed.
The
case is U.S. v Murgio et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New
York, No. 15-cr-00769.
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