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US Targets Crypto Remittances, Privacy and Prediction Markets

Thursday, March 12, 2026 · from 3 podcasts, 6 episodes
  • The U.S. is pursuing a multi-front crackdown, prosecuting privacy tool developers like Tornado Cash's Roman Storm and remittance platform founder Ray Youssef while pushing new surveillance powers.
  • Regulators are sending mixed signals, conceding mixers have legitimate uses while simultaneously proposing a 'hold law' to freeze suspicious assets, expanding Patriot Act surveillance.
  • Insider trading on prediction markets for geopolitical events is triggering a legislative backlash, but a U.S. ban would likely just push the activity and associated corruption offshore.

The U.S. government is escalating its financial war beyond sanctions, targeting the builders of tools that enable private or cheap transactions across borders.

On Bitcoin And, the focus is on the Department of Justice's relentless pursuit of Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm, who faces a second trial and up to 40 years for writing open-source code. This contrasts with a recent Treasury Department report that conceded crypto mixers have legitimate privacy uses, a stark reversal from its 2022 sanctions. The host on Bitcoin And noted the irony, arguing that if mixers aren't inherently illicit, everyone prosecuted for using them should be released.

The crackdown isn't limited to privacy. According to the Bitcoin Takeover Podcast, Ray Youssef, CEO of remittance platform Noones, claims he was kidnapped from Mexico and arrested after building a Bitcoin-based service that cut fees from 60% to 1%. He argues his real crime was creating a functional, pan-African clearing layer that threatens the dollar's hegemony in the Global South.

Simultaneously, the government is crafting new surveillance tools. The Treasury report proposes a 'hold law' to let institutions freeze suspicious digital assets and recommends expanding the Patriot Act's reach for digital transfers. This aligns with warnings that it represents the largest expansion of financial surveillance since 2001.

Another front is opening on prediction markets. A Polymarket event saw insiders net over $1 million betting on US strikes in Iran hours before they occurred. Senator Chris Murphy is now drafting legislation to ban such markets, warning they could incentivize officials to profit from war. The host on Bitcoin And argues the corruption is systemic, driven by junior staff with hallway intel, and a U.S. ban would merely push the markets and their problems offshore.

The regulatory landscape is a study in contradictions. While Strike secures a punishingly difficult New York BitLicense, Netflix bans Bitcoin sponsorships from a boxing event for being 'speculative' while approving gambling sites. The path forward is bifurcated: intense pressure on privacy and disruptive use cases, alongside a push for regulated, surveilled channels under established control.

Host, Bitcoin And:

- The whole point is Bitcoin is clear as crystal, but the U S treasury is not clear as crystal.

- Then if that's the case, then everybody that you sent up down the river because they were involved in a crypto mixer, you need to release them right now.

Entities Mentioned

Alex FinnPerson
BinanceCompany
CoinbaseCompany
Netflixtrending
PolymarketCompany
SAS Miningtrending
USDCProduct

Source Intelligence

What each podcast actually said

Civil AI | Bitcoin NewsMar 11

  • Binance has filed a defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal's publisher, Dow Jones, following a report alleging the DOJ is investigating if Iran used the exchange to circumvent US sanctions.
  • Binance stated it never fired employees for raising compliance concerns and fully cooperated with law enforcement, denying the WSJ report's claims.
  • The lawsuit comes while Binance operates under a US-appointed compliance monitor, who has requested records pertaining to the alleged Iranian transfers.
  • Netflix blocked Bitcoin mining firm SAS Mining and lending platform Ledden from sponsoring a boxer's gear for a live-streamed fight, citing a policy against speculative financial products.
  • Ken Halliburton, CEO of SAS Mining, called Netflix's decision incoherent, noting it approved sponsorships from gambling sites Polymarket and DraftKings, which involve real-money speculation.
  • The reversal forced boxer Justin Cardona to replace custom-embroidered trunks at his own expense just a week before the fight, disrupting his preparation.
  • Despite institutional resistance, firms like Mastercard are advancing mainstream crypto adoption through new global partner programs, including with Binance.
  • Binance has a history of legal action against media, having previously sued Forbes in 2020, and pleaded guilty to US AML and sanctions violations in 2023, paying $4.3 billion in penalties.

BTC's Golden Ticket | Bitcoin NewsMar 10

  • The Department of Justice is pursuing a second trial against Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm on unresolved money laundering charges, which could carry a maximum 40-year sentence.
  • Roman Storm was previously convicted of operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business. Bitcoin & Economic News host argues Storm is being prosecuted for writing open-source code for a protocol he doesn't control, calling him a political martyr.
  • The host characterizes the DOJ's pursuit of a second trial against Storm as political theater, questioning why a potential Trump administration hasn't intervened with a pardon.
  • U.S. authorities are sending conflicting messages, with a DOJ official stating 'writing code is not a crime' and the Treasury acknowledging legitimate privacy uses for mixers, while prosecutors simultaneously push forward with the case against Storm.
  • Coinbase has launched regulated Bitcoin and crypto futures in 26 European countries through its MiFID-registered entity, offering a regulated alternative to offshore platforms.
  • Coinbase's new European futures platform, which includes cash-settled Bitcoin futures and a 'MAG7' crypto-equity index with up to 10x leverage, uses USDC for funding instead of Tether. The host sees this as a regulatory-driven choice.
  • The host speculates Coinbase's European futures launch aligns with its 'exchange for everything' strategy and predicts Elon Musk might attempt to buy the company to integrate it into his 'everything app' vision for X.
  • The host frames the dual narratives of the legal battle over code and the race to build regulated financial empires as two sides of the same fight to define the next era of finance.

Cypherpunk Day | Bitcoin NewsMar 9

  • Analysts dismissed the mining of the 20 millionth Bitcoin as a non-event for price, with the Bitcoin And host arguing the predictable, transparent scarcity is the system's core feature, not a catalyst.
  • David Ng of Energy Co said the market is entering a new paradigm of a global asset with nearly zero new supply, a view echoed by Raphael Zaguri of Electron Energy who emphasized the unprecedented clarity of Bitcoin's issuance schedule.
  • The Bitcoin And host stated transaction fees are the only true variable in Bitcoin's future, determined by open market forces rather than opaque code.
  • The US Treasury's new 32-page report to Congress marks a tactical shift, admitting crypto mixers can serve legitimate privacy needs for lawful users, a recalibration from its 2022 sanction of Tornado Cash.
  • Alongside its privacy acknowledgement, the Treasury seeks new legislative tools including a digital asset-specific 'hold law' to let financial institutions freeze suspicious assets and wants to expand Patriot Act surveillance powers to crypto.
  • The Treasury report tries to thread a needle by distinguishing between custodial mixers, which it says must register, and non-custodial ones, recommending no new restrictions on the latter for now.
  • The Bitcoin And host contrasted Bitcoin's clarity with government opacity, stating, 'The whole point is Bitcoin is clear as crystal, but the US treasury is not clear as crystal.'
  • The host asserted that individuals holding their own Bitcoin keys do not fall under any proposed 'hold law' authority sought by the Treasury.
  • In parallel, 29 US lawmakers are pushing for a permanent legislative ban on a US central bank digital currency, reflecting growing political resistance to programmable government money.
  • The political fight over a CBDC is heating up as Bitcoin's apolitical, predictable monetary rules present a stark alternative to government-controlled, programmable money.

S17 E12: Ray Youssef on Fighting for the Global SouthMar 7

  • Ray Youssef, CEO of Noones, claims the U.S. government conspired to have him kidnapped from Mexico and arrested on fabricated charges.
  • He asserts his real crime was building Bitcoin-based remittances that undercut traditional services by 30-60%.
  • Youssef argues his service threatened the U.S. dollar's hegemony in the Global South, which provoked the government's response.
  • His remittance platform, Noones, connected gift cards to peer-to-peer crypto markets to facilitate transfers.
  • The service reportedly reduced typical remittance fees from 30-60% down to 1%.
  • Noones achieved a volume of $60 million per week flowing into Nigeria and across Africa.
  • Youssef states that U.S. authorities never thought crypto would be useful as a means of exchange in the Global South, believing it would remain 'a casino'.
  • He claims that after a speech in Mexico, 20 Mexican federales and immigration agents, allegedly bribed by U.S. officials, surrounded him.
  • Youssef says he was deported without extradition paperwork and flown to LAX, where federal marshals arrested him.
  • He describes the Department of Justice's charges as 'absurd', relying on expired money laundering statutes.
  • A novel accusation against him is conspiring not to have an effective anti-money laundering compliance program.
  • His lawyers argue the statute of limitations for the alleged crimes expired three years ago.
  • Youssef notes that his real-world compliance team was one-third of his 300-person company.
  • He believes the government's goal is punishment, not prosecution, and is 'working to rectify that mistake' of letting his service grow.
  • Youssef sees his case as a parallel to historical efforts to suppress pan-African financial independence, invoking Muammar Gaddafi.
  • He states the core conflict is about control, where a cheap, pan-African clearing layer built on Bitcoin threatens the dollar's grip on cross-border trade.
  • Youssef's trial will test how far the U.S. will go to protect its financial control, according to the summary.
  • Youssef quotes himself saying, 'I am guilty of the one unforgivable crime... I made crypto useful for real people.'
  • He further quotes, stating his service let people use their money 'without paying 30 to 60% fees.'

Strike In New York | Bitcoin NewsMar 6

  • Strike secured a New York BitLicense, a regulatory achievement that previously led many smaller Bitcoin firms to exit the state due to high compliance burdens.
  • Host David Bennett stated that roughly 80% of digital asset firms left New York when the BitLicense regime was first introduced.
  • David Bennett suggests that Strike obtaining the BitLicense demonstrates its scale and willingness to navigate a difficult regulatory environment.
  • David Bennett argues that Bitcoin's market perception as a risk-on speculative asset prevents its true decoupling from traditional financial markets.
  • Tether led a $7.5 million investment in UTXO, a startup developing infrastructure to settle USDT transactions directly on the Bitcoin blockchain and Lightning Network.
  • Tether's investment in UTXO aims to position Bitcoin as a global settlement layer for USDT, the world's most-used digital dollar.
  • David Bennett expresses skepticism about stablecoins as long-term savings tools but acknowledges their established utility.
  • David Bennett views Tether CEO Paolo Arduino's consistent focus on Bitcoin as a deliberate strategy to solidify Bitcoin's role in global finance.
  • Tether's strategy aims to cement Bitcoin's place in the global financial system, regardless of objections from Bitcoin purists.

Also from this episode:

Markets (1)
  • David Bennett observed a short-term inverse correlation between Bitcoin and oil prices during U.S. trading hours, linking it to Middle East tensions and the Federal Reserve's inflation response.

Poly-Corruption | Bitcoin NewsMar 5

  • Senator Chris Murphy is drafting legislation to ban prediction markets on sensitive government actions.
  • The host argues US legislation would merely push prediction markets offshore rather than eliminate them.

Also from this episode:

Markets (4)
  • Six Polymarket accounts funded within 24 hours of US strikes on Iran bought over $560,000 in 'YES' shares predicting military action.
  • The six accounts netted a combined $1.2 million in profit after the strikes occurred.
  • Blockchain analysis firm Bubble Maps identified the suspicious betting activity.
  • Polymarket pulled a market on nuclear weapon detonation after public backlash.
Corruption (5)
  • Senator Chris Murphy accused individuals with advanced knowledge of profiting from war through prediction markets.
  • Senator Chris Murphy warns that prediction markets pervert national security decisions by incentivizing officials to push for war to cash in.
  • Israeli authorities charged a reservist and a civilian earlier this year for using classified intel to place Polymarket bets.
  • The host argues the real insiders are likely junior staff or aides with hallway intel rather than senior principals.
  • The host argues corruption through prediction markets is systemic and not limited to one political faction.
Digital Sovereignty (1)
  • The host argues prediction market technology cannot be un-invented, comparing it to a genie out of the bottle.