Coinbase Reaches $100m Settlement With New York Regulators – The US-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase and New York’s Department of Financial Services (DFS) announced Wednesday that they have reached a $100 million settlement. The settlement, which includes a $50 million penalty, concludes the regulator’s inquiry into the company’s compliance with money laundering regulations. The department found that Coinbase treated its customer onboarding obligations as a “simple check-the-box” and had not done sufficient background checks, the regulator said.
“Coinbase failed to build and maintain a functional compliance program that could keep pace with its growth. That failure exposed the Coinbase platform to potential criminal activity,” said New York DFS superintendent Adrienne Harris. The exchange has addressed the problems, said Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s chief legal officer, in a statement. In a blogpost, Coinbase said the investigation centered on the company’s compliance program circa 2018 and 2019, as well as the compliance backlogs as the exchange grew in 2021.
“We took NYDFS’s concerns seriously and have taken substantial measures to address these historical shortcomings,” the blog post said. Coinbase, a publicly traded firm and one of the largest global crypto exchanges, will pay another $50m to boost compliance efforts aimed at blocking potential criminals from using the exchange, the company said.
The deal also requires Coinbase to work with a third-party monitor. Coinbase has been under scrutiny from DFS and other regulators. It has previously disclosed receiving investigative subpoenas and requests from the US Securities and Exchange Commission for documents and information.
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