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South Korean officials traveled to Serbia to find Do Kwon

South Korean authorities have previously requested cooperation from the Serbian government to bring Kwon back.

The hunt for the controversial founder of the now-collapsed Terra ecosystem, Do Kwon, has intensified with South Korean officials reportedly confirming they sent at least two people to Serbia to track him down.

According to a Feb. 7 Bloomberg report, the prosecutor’s office in Seoul said the reports “aren’t false” regarding members of its team trekking out to the Balkan state to find Kwon.

It appears at least two state officials went — one from the prosecutor’s office and the other from  South Korea’s Justice Ministry.

Do Kwon speaking at a conference about Terra before the ecosys. Source: Terra.

South Korean-based publication Chosun Media reported on Dec. 11 that a state intelligence official informed them that Kwon had based himself in Serbia.

There is currently no extradition treaty between South Korea and Serbia.

This likely made Serbia a great hideout spot for Kwon, according to a recent opinion article from Minso Kim, a writer for the South Korean publication Chosun Media.

South Korea has however stripped Kwon of his passport, which may make future travel more difficult.

Kwon has been accused of being on the run since Sept. 14, when South Korean prosecutors issued an arrest warrant against him, an accusation that he denied in October.

The 31-year-old fallen entrepreneur has also been accused of breaching capital markets laws.

While Kwon is known to be a prolific tweeter, he went nearly two months without tweeting or retweeting a single post — causing some to speculate what the controversial figure has been up to.

But Kwon recently responded to an evocative tweet targeted at him, stating that he hasn’t stolen any money and has never had any “secret cashouts.”

To date, Kwon denies any wrongdoing.

Related: Terraform Labs claims case against Do Kwon is ‘highly politicized’: WSJ

The collapse of the Terra ecosystem was in part triggered by the de-peg of its TerraClassicUSD (USTC) algorithmic stablecoin, UST. Terra Classic (LUNC) was closely linked to the stablecoin, with that too falling close to 100%.

Approximately $60 billion worth of value was wiped out of the ecosystem.

Cointelegraph reached out to Terraform Labs and the South Korean Prosecutor’s office for comment but did not receive an immediate response.

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Distressed Crypto Firm Vauld Given New Deadline for Restructuring Plan as Customer Funds Remain Frozen: Report

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Embattled crypto lender Vauld now has until February 28th to come up with a restructuring plan without getting hounded by claims from creditors. The company is initially set to submit its revival plan on January 20th, but Bloomberg reports that the firm successfully secured the approval of a Singapore Court to extend the deadline. A […]

The post Distressed Crypto Firm Vauld Given New Deadline for Restructuring Plan as Customer Funds Remain Frozen: Report appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Ripple CEO: XRP lawsuit resolved by June, SEC conduct ’embarrassing’

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said the firm's XRP lawsuit could come to an end within "single-digit months."

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse expects the firm’s long-running dispute with the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) will be finalized within “single-digit months” and remains confident in securing a favorable outcome.

Speaking to CNBC on Jan. 18 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Garlinghouse said the verdict could come as soon as June this year now that both parties have “fully filled and fully briefed” their arguments before the U.S. District Court:

“We expect a decision from a judge certainly in 2023. You don’t really have control over when a judge makes their decisions. But I’m optimistic that sometime in the coming single digit months we’ll have closure there.”

While Garlinghouse and investors believe the facts, law and the court will ultimately side with Ripple, the Ripple CEO also took the opportunity to ridicule the SEC’s “embarrassing” behavior displayed throughout the lawsuit, noting:

“The SEC’s behavior in some of it has been embarrassing as a U.S. citizen. Just some of the things that have been happening, like you’ve got to be kidding."

Garlinghouse also argued the firm was betrayed by the regulator, as it filed the lawsuit despite their efforts to meet with them on three separate occasions seeking regulatory clarity:

“Not once did they say to me we think XRP may be a security. So to later go back and say hey the whole time we thought XRP was a security we just didn’t tell you… that doesn’t feel like a genuine partnership between public sector and private sector.”

While noting that the outcome of the case also has huge implications for the cryptocurrency industry, Garlinghouse reiterated that Ripple would only settle if it was made clear that XRP is not a security.

However, “the SEC and Gary Gensler has very outwardly said he views almost all crypto as a security” Garlinghouse said, “so that leaves very little space in the Venn diagram for settlement,” he added.

Garlinghouse speaking with CNBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Source: CNBC.

Garlinghouse added that the U.S. SEC should take note from some of the more crypto-friendly countries who are piecing together more “positive” regulation that doesn’t stifle innovation.

Among the countries he spoke highly of included the the United Arab Emirates, Japan, Singapore, Switzerland and the U.K.

Related: Ripple files final submission against SEC as landmark case nears end

The lawsuit was initiated by the SEC in December 2020, claiming that Ripple illegally sold its XRP token as an unregistered security.

Ripple has long disputed the claim, arguing that it doesn’t constitute an investment contract under the Howey test.

Should the two sides fail to settle, the New York-based District Court will either make a standalone ruling or put the matter before a jury in a trial.

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Troubled crypto lender Vauld gets extended creditor protection

The company claims that the negotiations with potential crisis managers entered the “advanced stage.”

Embattled crypto lending platform Vauld was granted another period of creditor protection from a Singapore court. The company should come up with a revival plan before Feb. 28. 

As reported by Bloomberg on Jan. 17, Vauld has been granted more than a month to close its negotiations with one of two digital-asset fund managers to take over the executive control of the tokens stuck on its platform. Apparently, the Singapore high court was satisfied by the company’s claim that the negotiations have entered to the “advanced stage.”

In July 2022, the platform halted withdrawals for its 800,000 customers, citing unfavorable market conditions and an unprecedented $200 million worth of withdrawals in under two weeks. In August 2022, it was already granted a three-month moratorium to develop a restructuring plan for the business and provide a better outcome for its creditors. Back then the judge denied the company’s request for a six-month protection period, citing concerns that a lengthier moratorium “won’t get adequate supervision and monitoring.”

From the beginning of the first moratorium, it became known that Nexo, a Swiss-headquartered crypto lender, intended to acquire Vauld with all its assets. However, after Nexo’s own office in Bulgaria was raided by police, Vauld denied any possibility of this deal.

Related: 3AC, Coinflex founders collaborating to raise $25M for new claims trading exchange

That’s not the first time Singapore authorities have demonstrated their readiness to let troubled crypto companies fix their problems. Another major Singapore-based platform, Zipmex, was granted a three-month moratorium to sort out liquidity issues in August 2022.

However, the fate of crypto lending in the country remains unclear, with Singapore’s central bank proposing banning digital payment token service providers from offering “any credit facility” to consumers, including both fiat and cryptocurrencies.

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Hodlnaut creditors reject the restructuring plan, prefer liquidation

Hodlnaut downplayed its exposure to the Terra ecosystem, but an investigation into the embattled crypto lender shows it lost $190 million in the Terra crash.

The Singapore-based troubled crypto lender is looking at a possible liquidation as the firm’s creditors have rejected the proposed restructuring plan and seek liquidation of the platform’s assets.

The group of creditors rejected a restructuring plan offer allowing the current directors to oversee the firm’s operations during the restructuring phase. However, a Jan. 12 hearing rejected an application to remove the interim judicial managers, reported Bloomberg.

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The creditors believe restructuring plans are of no help and it is in their best interest to wind down and liquidate the firm’s remaining assets. Algorand Foundation, one of Hodlnaut’s key creditors, called for immediate liquidation and distribution of remaining assets among creditors to maximize the remaining value.

Hodlnaut’s trouble first surfaced in August 2022 when the firm suspended withdrawals, citing volatile market conditions and a lack of liquidity. However, it was later revealed that the crypto lender downplayed its exposure to the collapsed Terra ecosystem and lost nearly $190 million. The executives later deleted thousands of documents related to their investments to hide their exposure.

Related: Winklevoss slams SEC charges against Gemini as a ‘super lame ... manufactured parking ticket’

The crypto lender sought judicial management under Singapore law to avoid forced liquidations. The firm was eventually placed under a creditor protection program in August, hoping to utilize the management period to restore its asset-to-debt ratio to 1:1 and allow users to withdraw their initial cryptocurrency deposits. However, the government-aided judicial management program didn’t help its cause for long.

Later in November 2022, the firm’s founders were probed for downplaying their exposure to specific crypto tokens and misrepresentations of facts. The investigation was based on several complaints from investors between August and November 2022.

Hodlnaut and Algorand Foundation didn't respond to Cointelegraph's request for comments as of publication time.

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