Canadian Math Prodigy Allegedly Stole $65 Million In Crypto (theglobeandmail.com)
- Reference: 0177030849
- News link: https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/04/15/2017230/canadian-math-prodigy-allegedly-stole-65-million-in-crypto
- Source link: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/economy/article-math-prodigy-cryptocurrency-enforcement-united-states/
> Andean Medjedovic was 18 years old when he made a decision that would irrevocably alter the course of his life. In the fall of 2021, shortly after completing a master's degree at the University of Waterloo, the math prodigy and cryptocurrency trader from Hamilton had conducted a complex series of transactions designed to exploit a vulnerability in the code of a decentralized finance platform. The maneuver had allegedly allowed him to siphon approximately $16.5-million in digital tokens out of two liquidity pools operated by the platform, Indexed Finance, according to a U.S. court document.
>
> Indexed Finance's leaders traced the attack back to Mr. Medjedovic, and made him an offer: Return 90 per cent of the funds, keep the rest as a so-called "bug bounty" -- a reward for having identified an error in the code -- and all would be forgiven. Mr. Medjedovic would then be free to launch his career as a white hat, or ethical, hacker. Mr. Medjedovic didn't take the deal. His social media posts hinted, without overtly stating, that he believed that because he had operated within the confines of the code, he was entitled to the funds -- a controversial philosophy in the world of decentralized finance known as "Code is Law." But instead of testing that argument in court, Mr. Medjedovic went into hiding. By the time authorities arrived on a quiet residential street in Hamilton to search his parents' townhouse less than two months later, Mr. Medjedovic had moved out, taking his electronic devices with him.
>
> Then, roughly two years later, he struck again, netting an even larger sum -- approximately $48.4-million -- by conducting a similar exploit on another decentralized finance platform, U.S. authorities allege. Mr. Medjedovic, now 22, faces five criminal charges -- including wire fraud, attempted extortion and money laundering -- according to a U.S. federal court document that was unsealed earlier this year. If convicted, he could be facing decades in prison. First, authorities will have to find him.
[1] https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/economy/article-math-prodigy-cryptocurrency-enforcement-united-states/
Know the room (Score:2)
Why pay 90% back to the exchange in exchange for forgiveness when you could donate 1% to a certain influential person's memecoin and likely get a full pardon.
Re: Know the room (Score:2)
That would be the "Sam Brinkman-Freid" approach...
[1]https://www.reuters.com/legal/... [reuters.com]
[1] https://www.reuters.com/legal/bankman-fried-used-customer-funds-100-mln-us-political-donations-prosecutors-say-2023-08-14/
Science fiction (Score:1)
This is the most cyberpunk story ever to meet reality: a young, brilliant digital native exploits the bleeding edge of technology (DeFi), operating under a potentially revolutionary (or rationalizing) philosophy ("Code is Law"), pulling off massive digital heists, and subsequently becomes a fugitive from global authorities. It blurs the lines between coding, finance, ethics, and international law in a way that feels ripped directly from the pages of Gibson or Stephenson.
Serious question... (Score:2)
What is the statute of limitations on crimes like these? How long will this kid have to hide before he escapes prosecution? I bet it's not that long...
No worries! (Score:2)
No worries, because the Dear (Orange) Leader has [1]made some changes [theverge.com].
[1] https://www.theverge.com/policy/645399/trump-doj-cryptocurrency-fraud-prosecutions-memo
This movie will end badly (Score:2)
> embracing the controversial "Code is Law" philosophy
Ahhh, the computer nerd equivalent of the Sovereign Citizens movement. This boy's in for a shock when he tries to wheel out the Lawrence Lessig defense in a U.S. criminal court.
This is why 20 year olds (Score:2)
Shouldnt be trusted to walk with scissors, let alone make big life decisions or hold major responsibility. Theyre brains are nowhere near fully baked. This guy could have walked away with a million USD and a reputation as one of the best white hat hackers of his generation. Instead, his future is: oh wait hes got no future.
Re: This is why 20 year olds (Score:2)
He's got a future, he just needs to wait-out the statute of limitations on his crimes...
Or do you think this 25 year-old can't stay hidden with his $65+ million? His biggest challenge is banking, but there are certainly some central/South American pharmaceutical entrepreneurs that could show him how it's done...
Re: This is why 20 year olds (Score:2)
How old do you need to be to know the difference between they're and their?