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The South Korean police are reportedly preparing to charge Coinoneâs executives, including its CEO, and 20 of the exchangeâs members. This follows a 10-month investigation on allegations that the exchange provided gambling services through its crypto margin trading program.
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Coinoneâs Investigation Concludes
South Koreaâs Cybercrime Investigation Unit of the Southern Provincial Police Department announced on Thursday, June 7, its plan to bring charges against Coinone over the exchangeâs margin trading service, local media report.
Coinone, which opened in August 2014, is the countryâs third-largest cryptocurrency exchange, after Upbit and Bithumb. Its 24-hour trading volume is $34,342,088 at the time of this writing, according to Coinmarketcap.
The police are reportedly recommending that the prosecutorâs office charges three of Coinoneâs executives, including CEO Myunghun Cha, as well as 20 members. The former will be charged with providing illegal gambling services and the latter with illegally gambling.
In South Korea, gambling is a crime under Chapter 23 of the Criminal Act.
The investigation of Coinone âon allegations that the exchange provided gambling services for margin tradingâ began in August last year, the Kyunghyang Shinmun wrote, elaborating:
The police concluded that the âmargin tradingâ service of the virtual currency exchange is gambling.
According to the police, âThe case was the first investigation related to the operation of a virtual currency exchange and it took considerable time to review the law,â Yonhap conveyed on Thursday.
Crypto Margin Trading vs Gambling
Coinone and its executives have been accused of providing cryptocurrency gambling services through its margin trading program from November 2016 to December last year. The exchange âallowed members to trade up to four times the amount of the deposit (margin) and to pay commission in exchange for the transactions,â the news outlet described, adding:
Margin trading is similar to the credit trading technique of the stock market, but it was based on gambling because it was not authorized by the authorities and that it was targeting virtual currencies instead of stocks.
The investigation reveals that 19,000 Coinone users, between ages 20 and 50, had been using the exchangeâs margin service. Most of them are either office workers, unemployed, or self-employed. In particular, 20 members traded over 3 billion won [~US$2.8 million]. The news outlet noted that gambling âcan be used to collect criminal proceeds, and therefore interest in coins and margin users will be widened according to the results of the trial in the future.â
Coinone Denies Charges
Throughout the investigation, Coinone and its executives denied the charges and maintained that they âdid not know it was illegal because there is a similar service in the stock market.â An employee of the exchange was quoted by the news outlet saying:
We do not think it is illegal because it [the service] has been legally reviewed by lawyers before [we started] the margin trading service.
What do you think of South Korean charging Coinone for offering gambling services through margin trading? Let us know in the comments section below.
Images courtesy of Shutterstock and Coinone.
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