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ARTICLE ADHackers and scammers have escalated their activities targeting the crypto sector, the market valuation of which touched $3.007 trillion (roughly Rs. 2,22,79,296 crore) last year. Kevin Thomas, a senator from New York has proposed to add crypto-related scams under the category of criminal offenses. Thomas has introduced a bill amendment request to strictly punish those who exploit virtual currencies and cause financial harm to innocent investors. Hackers striking at crypto developers and projects have also been listed under criminal offenders by Thomas.
Thomas, in Senate Bill S8839, has listed an array of actions that could make for penalised violations.
These include virtual token frauds, private key fraud, and rug pull scams.
Rug pull scams are those where creators of NFT projects or cryptocurrencies collect quick sales and disappear. In recent times, rug pulls have emerged among top ways to extract loads of money from crypto projects and community members.
Last year, a report by Chainalysis claimed that crypto scams mooched off over $7.7 billion (roughly Rs. 58,697 crore) from investors. Out of this, rug pulls took in more than $2.8 billion (roughly Rs. 21,333 crore) worth of cryptocurrency from scam victims last year in 2021.
Thomas' bill intends to provides a clear legal framework against crypto crimes.
It aims to establish the law amendment implying rug pull charges on those crypto developers who sell “more than 10 percent of such tokens within five years from the date of last sale of such tokens.”
The bill is under committee review to determine its eligibility for floor consideration, CoinTelegraph reported.
US lawmakers are pacing briskly towards legally framing different aspects of crypto.
Earlier in April, two members of the House of Representatives — California Representative Norma Torres and Arkansas Representative Rick Crawford introduced a legislation to mitigate financial risks to the US economy tied to El Salvador adopting Bitcoin as a legal tender last year.
Since El Salvador uses the US dollar as its fiat, BTC use by Salvadorans is expected to have had some impact on the dollar.
Recently, US President Joe Biden signed executive orders on the government oversight of the cryptocurrency industry.
Crypto holding and trading is not banned in the US. The nation identifies crypto as a property, and not currency. US' Internal Revenue Service (IRS) imposes a tax reportedly between 10 to 20 percent on crypto transactions in the USA.
Meanwhile, other nations are also working on tightening their hold of crypto hackers and scammers.
New rules have been passed in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), guaranteeing stringent punishments for crypto scammers targeting investors in the country.
These rules which came into effect on January 2, 2022, entail prison time for up to five years as well as a penalty up to AED 1 million (roughly Rs. 2 crore).