BSV
$68.68
Vol 90.65m
3.37%
BTC
$90374
Vol 41950.53m
-1.15%
BCH
$449.55
Vol 1096.78m
2.66%
LTC
$90.8
Vol 2564.6m
3.85%
DOGE
$0.35
Vol 9599.67m
-6.76%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

After issuing an arrest warrant for Terra Founder Do Kwon, South Korean authorities seek to invalidate Do Kwon’s passport and force him back home. 

Kwon has been thought to reside in Singapore for months now, claiming to have moved to the city-state way before the ill-fated Terra project went up in flames. According to a report by a Korean newspaper, Korean authorities are now seeking to expedite his return back home by invalidating his passport.

CoinGeek reported that Korean authorities issued an arrest warrant against Kwon last week, seeking to apprehend him alongside five others he worked with at Terraform Labs, the company behind LUNA and UST digital currencies. 

The newspaper noted that invalidating a passport is a lengthy process that could take up to a month. In the meantime, the Korean authorities will be pressuring him to return to the country.

Terra’s ecosystem tokens, LUNA and UST stablecoin, crashed in May, taking $60 billion worth of value with them. The crash had a butterfly effect on the industry, and since then, several notable companies, including Three Arrows Capital and Celsius Network, have all collapsed.

While creating an (un)stablecoin like UST isn’t a crime, Korean authorities are looking into allegations that Kwon cashed out over $2.7 billion in UST before the token depegged and eventually crashed to zero. He’s accused of having used a Terra-based DeFi borrowing protocol to cash out UST to USDC and USDT.

As Korean authorities seek to push Kwon to return home, a new question has cropped up—where is the Terra founder? While initially he was thought to reside in Singapore, local police in the city-state have disputed the claims.

In a brief statement, Singaporean police stated:

“Do Kwon is currently not in Singapore. SPF will assist the Korean National Police Agency (KNPA) within the ambit of our domestic legislation and international obligations.”

Kwon’s work permit in Singapore is set to expire on December 7, and he’d have to renew it to continue residing in the country. With the investigation hanging over his head, this renewal might be much harder than it would have been a few weeks ago.

For those that want to know where he is, Kwon had one message over the weekend—his location is none of your business. 

Watch: The BSV Global Blockchain Convention panel, Blockchain for Government Data & Applications

Recommended for you

This Week in AI: US, China clash; Amazon eyes in-house chips
China and the U.S. are butting heads anew over trade, while Amazon eyes to become a major player in the...
November 15, 2024
CREATE MORE Act and its impact on emerging tech
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the CREATE MORE Act into law, focusing on lowering corporate taxes, simplifying business processes,...
November 15, 2024
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement