Crypto Murder Case From Seoul’s Beverly Hills Spurs Tighter Digital-Asset Regulation

Just before midnight on March 29 an assailant dragged a screaming woman away from an apartment block in an upscale Seoul district and bundled her into a car that sped off into the night.

(Bloomberg) — Just before midnight on March 29 an assailant dragged a screaming woman away from an apartment block in an upscale Seoul district and bundled her into a car that sped off into the night.

Her body was found a few days later, a murder thought to stem from a dispute over crypto investment losses and an attempt to steal the victim’s digital tokens, according to South Korean authorities and local reports. Security cameras recorded the kidnapping in Gangnam, a locality likened to California’s Beverly Hills for its wealth.

The homicide adds to a string of South Korean scandals linked to digital assets, most prominently the capture of former fugitive Do Kwon after coins he created erased at least $40 billion in a crash a year ago. The latest incident injected fresh urgency into efforts to get the nation’s first standalone crypto bill passed in a parliamentary vote as early as May.

“There is finally a consensus on both sides of the aisle that we need to get a law in place as soon as possible,” Back Hyeryun, chair of the National Policy Committee at the South Korean parliament, said in an interview. “There were too many issues, so it was necessary to focus on one thing first — investor protection — to move on quickly,” she said.

Bill’s Details

Back, an opposition lawmaker, has been pushing to get the bill implemented. Her office said in a statement that the fallout of the Gangnam murder case and the Kwon wipeout strengthened public consensus for a crypto code.

The prospective law is the Virtual Asset User Protection Bill, which integrates 19 crypto-related bills after a yearslong delay. 

The legislation defines virtual assets and imposes penalties for transgressions like the use of nonpublic information, market manipulation and unfair trading practices, according to a draft seen by Bloomberg News. The code would give the Financial Services Commission the power to oversee crypto operators and asset custody. The Bank of Korea would also be able to probe such platforms. 

The act will require insurance in case of hacks as well as reserve funds and record keeping. The rules are set to cover virtual assets such as Bitcoin, while existing capital-markets law would apply to tokens viewed as securities.

South Korea’s monthly spot crypto trading volumes sunk to about $38 billion in April from a peak of nearly $200 billion two years ago, figures from CCData show. That reflects the fallout of the collapse of Kwon’s TerraUSD and Luna coins amid a wider 2022 market rout that erased $1.5 trillion in value and blew up firms such as FTX.

But the nation remains well-known for virtual-asset manias. Leading domestic platform Upbit placed in the top 10 for volumes in the past 24 hours among exchanges globally, CoinGecko data show.

Alternative Investment

“In Korea, wealth growth has been centered on property investment, but it is difficult for young people because real estate is costly,” Back said. “Virtual assets have become an alternative investment for them.” 

Aside from the murder case and fallout over Kwon — who was found in Montenegro and is wanted by Seoul and the US — South Korea has also been investigating more than $12 billion of abnormal foreign-exchange transactions, some of which are crypto-linked. 

Earlier this week, prosecutors searched the offices of local crypto exchanges Upbit and Bithumb to secure the transaction records of a lawmaker who came under fire for sizable crypto trading, according to the Yonhap News Agency.

The nation’s intensified push to impose crypto rules is part of a global drive to regulate digital assets. For instance, the European Union, Dubai and Hong Kong have pursued frameworks that seek to protect investors and spur growth.

In contrast, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have cracked down on crypto outfits in the US, where partisan divides have stalled legislative efforts.

Opinion Split

It will take a year for South Korea’s law to be enforced if the bill is passed this month, according to Back’s office. The framework has split opinion, with some arguing it risks stifling the industry and others saying more is needed.

“The best way to promote an industry is to impose less regulations, but with the current bill, it will only make it more difficult for new businesses to grow,” said Kim Hyoung Joong, a professor at Korea University Graduate School of Information Security and chairman of the Korea Fintech Society.

Meanwhile, Kang Seong-hoo, the head of the Korea Digital Asset Service Provider Association, said a second round of legislation is needed to cover the issuance, distribution and listing of cryptocoins.

Back said the Asian nation’s rulebook will be gradually expanded to improve oversight of crypto exchanges and services like initial coin offerings.

“The number of people investing in and using cryptocurrency has become so significant that the absence of any legal regulation and the inability to do anything in the face of fraudulent activity only means the legislature isn’t doing its job,” Back said.

–With assistance from Sidhartha Shukla.

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