L.A.'s 'Bitcoin Maven' Faces Sentencing for Running Illegal Money Exchange

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Sentencing is expected today for a Los Angeles Bitcoin trader who made at least $300,000 annually by running an illegal, unregistered multi-million dollar money transmitting business, which exchanged the digital currency for cash.

Theresa Tetley, 50, who operated under the name “Bitcoin Maven,” previously pleaded guilty in downtown Los Angeles to federal charges of having operated a money transmission business that failed to comply with federal registration requirements and that she conducted a financial transaction involving proceeds of drug trafficking, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. The case against Tetley is thought to the first of its kind in Southern California, although other Bitcoin traders have been prosecuted elsewhere in the past year.

The government is asking U.S. District Judge Manuel Real to impose a 30-month federal prison sentence, while Tetley's defense attorney is arguing for a year behind bars. Federal prosecutors have also requested an order of forfeiture for 40 Bitcoin (currently worth $262,759.40), and $292,264 and 25 assorted gold bars seized by law enforcement on March 30.

Tetley's business “fueled a black-market financial system in the Central District of California that purposely and deliberately existed outside of the regulated bank industry,” prosecutors wrote in court papers.

Between 2014 and 2017, Tetley used a listing on localbitcoins.com, an online marketplace similar to eBay or Craigslist, where visitors can buy and sell digital currency from others in their community.

Digital currency exists entirely on the internet and is not stored in any physical form. It is not issued by any government, bank, or company and is instead generated and controlled through computer software operating on a decentralized peer-to-peer network. While digital currency is not illegal in the United States and may be used for legitimate financial transactions, the “pseudonymous” nature of the currency is used for conducting illegal transactions, such as the sale of drugs.

The U.S. Attorney's Office contends that in the course of running her business, Tetley exchanged between $6 million and $9.5 million.

Photo: Getty Images


Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content