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Just saw something interesting in the crypto history files. Alexander Vinnik, the guy behind BTC-e back in the day, is telling people who lost money on that exchange to basically take it up with U.S. authorities. Pretty wild considering what went down with that platform.
So here's the thing - BTC-e was huge in Russian-speaking crypto circles, but it got shut down in 2017 over money laundering concerns. We're talking like $9 billion in suspicious activity allegedly flowing through there, including coins from the Mt. Gox hack. Alexander Vinnik got arrested in Greece that summer, and it became this whole international extradition saga. France held him for a bit, then the U.S. got custody. He eventually pleaded guilty to money laundering in 2024.
Fast forward to February 2025 - Trump's administration released Vinnik as part of a prisoner swap with Russia. Now he's back and fielding questions from people still upset about their missing funds from the old exchange. His answer? Go after the U.S. government, because apparently all the BTC-e assets got seized by American authorities.
There's actually an ongoing lawsuit in D.C. federal court about this, filed back in June 2025, specifically dealing with all the virtual currency that was sitting in BTC-e wallets when everything collapsed. Alexander Vinnik's basically saying that's where your money is now.
But here's where it gets messy. Some people are pushing back on Vinnik's narrative. Andrey Zakharov, this Russian investigative journalist, pointed out that Aleksey Bilyuchenko, the other co-founder, previously said he still controls the remaining balances. Then there's the WEX situation - that was supposed to be the successor platform, but it went dark in 2018. Some observers think it was just an internal management breakdown rather than U.S. pressure.
The plot thickened in October when reports came out about thousands of Bitcoin moving from Bilyuchenko-linked wallets. More coins vanished in December. So the question everyone's asking now is whether Alexander Vinnik's telling the whole story about where the money actually went.