Santa Monica Man to Plead Guilty in Cryptocurrency Scheme

Cryptocurrency graph

Photo: Jasmin Merdan / Moment / Getty Images

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - A Santa Monica man has agreed to plead guilty to using his cryptocurrency cash exchange business to launder millions of dollars in criminal proceeds, officials announced Tuesday.

Charles Randol, 33, will plead guilty to failure to maintain an effective anti-money laundering program, a crime that carries a sentence of up to five years in federal prison, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Both the charges and plea agreement were filed Tuesday in Los Angeles federal court. Randol is expected to formally plead guilty in the coming weeks.

From October 2017 to July 2021, Randol owned and operated a virtual- currency money services business known as Digital Coin Strategies LLC. The company offered cryptocurrency cash exchange services for a commission, according to his plea agreement.

Randol met anonymous customers in person to complete transactions, controlling and operating a network of automated kiosks in Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside counties that converted cash to Bitcoin and vice versa, and conducted Bitcoin-for-cash transactions for unknown people who mailed large amounts of U.S. currency to him, including to post office boxes that he controlled, court papers show.

Randol admitted in his plea agreement to repeatedly violating federal law and his company's own policies by facilitating suspicious currency exchange transactions and taking steps to conceal them from law enforcement.

For example, Randol frequently conducted in person cash transactions that exceeded $10,000 with anonymous or pseudo-anonymous individuals, including people who Randol knew only by such monikers as Puppet Shariff, White Jetta, Yogurt Monster and Hood.

In his plea agreement, Randol admitted to engaging in specific transactions from October 2020 to January 2021 in which he exchanged a total of $273,940 in cash for Bitcoin without requesting a name, proof of identity, Social Security number, or any other information about the buyer or the source of the funds being exchanged -- violations of the Bank Secrecy Act.

Randol also allowed criminals to structure and launder funds through his Bitcoin kiosks in malls, gas stations and convenience stores in Los Angeles, Glendale, Santa Clarita, Huntington Beach, Santa Ana and Riverside, prosecutors allege.


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