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IRS Agent Links Tornado Cash’s Roman Storm to Binance Funds and Offshore Dealings

2 mins
Updated by Mohammad Shahid
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In Brief

  • IRS agent testified Roman Storm moved $8M through Binance and sent $2.6M each to co-founders.
  • Chat logs revealed plans to open offshore entities and buy real estate using crypto funds.
  • Defense argued Tornado Cash pools were immutable and Storm had no control post-2020.
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Federal prosecutors presented evidence suggesting Tornado Cash founder Roman Storm moved millions through Binance and coordinated with co-founders to send funds and buy offshore real estate.

IRS-CI Special Agent Stephan George told the jury he traced over $533,000 in USDT from a Binance account allegedly controlled by Storm. He said the funds were moved on August 9, 2022, and distributed across three wallet addresses.

Storm Allegedly Sent $2.6 Million Each to Co-Founders

Prosecutors showed chat logs between Tornado Cash’s founding trio: Roman Storm, Roman Semenov, and Alexey Pertsev. In one message, Storm wrote:

“I overloaded 8 million yesterday.”

Another message stated:

“I sent you guys 2.6 million each.”

Agent George said these communications indicated Storm had access to the funds and decision-making power over the wallet in question.

In a separate message, Storm reportedly told a colleague to:

“Give her a task to f**ing open various offshores… and to buy real estate.”*

Prosecutors also read a message from Semenov stating:

“I will send some TORN later, to avoid getting busted.”

The prosecution argued these messages revealed intent to obscure transactions and profit from Tornado Cash’s operations.

96% of Tornado Cash Users Relied on Web Interface

Earlier in the day, prosecution expert Philip Werlau of AnChain.AI testified that 96.2% of users accessed Tornado Cash through its user interface (UI), not the command line. 

He said Lazarus Group shifted to CLI usage only after US sanctions were imposed. Werlau said this behavior suggested a deliberate attempt to avoid detection.

During cross-examination, Roman Storm’s defense challenged Werlau’s conclusions. He emphasized that Tornado Cash’s smart contract pools became immutable in May 2020, meaning neither Storm nor the DAO could change them.

Klein also clarified that Tornado’s UI did not handle transactions directly. Deposits and withdrawals required interacting with Ethereum’s smart contracts, not any centralized interface.

Meanwhile, prosecutors presented an email from an earlier witness, Ms. Lin, addressed to Tornado Cash’s public inbox. Judge Failla warned the jury not to treat its content as fact. 

The email’s inclusion may relate to the defense’s previously stated mistrial concerns, though no motion was filed.

What’s Next in the Tornado Cash Trial

The prosecution is expected to rest its case tomorrow morning. A separate hearing on the Chainalysis expert testimony is still pending.

Storm’s defense is preparing to present its side, focusing on the immutability of Tornado Cash and Storm’s lack of control after deployment.

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Mohammad Shahid
Mohammad Shahid is an experienced crypto journalist with a specialization in blockchain security. He covers a wide range of topics spanning everything from Web3 to retail crypto. As an experienced freelance journalist, he has worked on campaigns for several tier-1 exchanges, such as Bitget, and startups, including RankFi and HAQQ. Mohammad comes from an extensive technical background, with a master’s degree in Cyber Security Analysis from Macquarie University, where he majored in...
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