– Charlie Shrem (@CharlieShrem) 30 Aug 2014 “I was there when he proposed and super happy I’m not missing it”, Shrem added. White collar crimes Hearing Shrem’s case is US District Judge Jed S Rakoff. Rakoff recently penned an editorial in the New York Review of Books regretting the difficulties the authorities have faced in successfully prosecuting more serious charges such as fraud, or failing to report suspicious activity, especially with regard to the recent global financial crisis. Having these charges removed from the list is likely a confidence booster for Shrem. He was initially arrested in public circumstances at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport on 27th January, as he arrived home from a bitcoin conference in Amsterdam. Though he resigned his position on the Bitcoin Foundation Board of Directors as a result of the arrest, he maintained he was not guilty and still enjoyed the support of many in the bitcoin community. He was first unleashed from confinement to his parents’ house in Brooklyn in April, to attend the premiere of documentary ‘The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin’, and also attended a banking industry conference in New York in July to speak about risks banks faced when dealing with bitcoin issues. He led a panel at July’s North American Bitcoin Conference in Chicago via a telepresence robot. Co-defendant Robert Faiella According to a court schedule notice released to the public, Shrem’s co-defendant in the case, Robert Faiella of Florida, was also mentioned – but it was not clear whether or not he would also make a deal (or even if one was offered). Faiella, aka ‘BTCKing’, is accused of selling $1m in bitcoins to drug traffickers and funneling them to Shrem’s BitInstant. Faiella has no prior criminal record. Charlie Shrem
Original author: Jon Southurst