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Israeli Bank Refuses to Accept Retiree’s Bitcoin Gains

3 mins
Updated by Geraint Price
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In Brief

  • In 2021, Esther Freeman wanted to deposit her Bitcoin profits from a 2013 BTC purchase at Bank Hapoalim in Israel.
  • Despite a 40-year customer relationship, the bank refused the deposit and citing legal provisions.
  • The institution and the customer have now reached an out-of-court agreement – ​​the exact circumstances are, however, unknown.
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Israel’s Hapoalim Bank refused to accept $273,000 from 70-year-old retiree Esther Freeman’s Bitcoin (BTC) profits. The bank states that it cannot accept the amount due to regulatory policies.

Amid uncertainty on crypto regulations, Esther Freeman has been waging a legal battle against the Hapoalim Bank since 2021.

Israeli Citizen Bank

Freeman and Israel’s second-largest commercial bank finally agreed to settle a two-year-old dispute. Each party should pay their own legal fees as a part of the settlement. However, the exact terms of the agreement are not yet known.

Bitcoin retiree Esther Freeman
“Bitcoin retiree” Esther Freeman; Source: Calcalistech.com

In 2021, Freeman, who has been a client of Hapoalim Bank for 40 years, sued her bank for refusing to accept the deposits from her Bitcoin profits. 

Freeman’s principal investment amount had increased more than a hundredfold since she first purchased Bitcoin in 2013.

Freeman invested 10,000 shekels (approx $2,700) in Bitcoin (BTC) via a third party in 2013. At the time, digital asset exchanges were not widely available. Therefore, Freeman could not simply buy her Bitcoins through a crypto exchange like she does today.

Read our detailed guide on how to choose a crypto exchange here

According to a CTech report, by July 2021, when Bitcoin was trading at around $58,000, her investment was worth almost 1 million shekels (approx $273,000).

Why Did Bank Refuse Deposits?

In its defense, the bank argued that it failed to accept the amount under the terms of its regulations. In addition, Freeman’s Bitcoin purchase at the time was not made by a regulated or monitored company, but by an individual in cash.

The regulations require banks to conduct appropriate risk assessments, establish policies and track a digital asset’s journey from acquisition to fiat money.

According to the bank:

“It is not possible to trace the path of the money related to the purchase [of Bitcoin].” 

The bank can approve such deposits only in cases where buying and selling digital currencies come from the same account. That is why the bank did not accept Freeman’s Bitcoin profits.

Last year, the Bank of Israel’s Banking Regulatory Department issued a draft regulation responding to increased consumer transactions involving digital assets such as Bitcoin. This was intended to address concerns about combating money laundering and terrorist financing.

As a part of its fight against crypto money laundering and terrorist financing, the country recently seized $1.7 million in cryptocurrency from wallets funding the Iranian Hezbollah militant group. In May 2023, the Israeli authorities seized the Binance accounts used by the militant organizations Hamas and the Islamic State.

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For BeInCrypto’s latest Bitcoin (BTC) analysis, click here.

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Harsh Notariya
Harsh Notariya is an Editorial Standards Lead at BeInCrypto, who also writes about various topics, including decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN), tokenization, crypto airdrops, decentralized finance (DeFi), meme coins, and altcoins. Before joining BeInCrypto, he was a community consultant at Totality Corp, specializing in the metaverse and non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Additionally, Harsh was a blockchain content writer and researcher at Financial Funda, where he created...
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