LOS ANGELES
– A Westwood man has agreed to plead guilty to federal criminal charges for
owning and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business where he
exchanged up to $25 million in cash and virtual currency for individuals,
including Darknet drug dealers and other criminals, some of whom used his
Bitcoin ATM kiosk.
Kunal Kalra,
25 – who was also known as “Kumar,” “shecklemayne” and “coinman” – was charged
today in a four-count criminal information filed in United States District
Court and is expected to make his initial court appearance next month. Pursuant
to a plea agreement also filed today, Kalra agreed to plead guilty to four
felonies: distribution of methamphetamine, operating an unlicensed money
transmitting business, laundering of monetary instruments, and failure to
maintain an effective anti-money laundering program.
This is
believed to be the first federal criminal case charging an unlicensed money
remitting business that used a Bitcoin kiosk.
According to
the court documents, from May 2015 through October 2017, Kalra knowingly
operated a virtual currency exchange business where he exchanged U.S. dollars
for Bitcoin and vice versa. Kalra charged commissions for exchanging dollars
for Bitcoin, and he only dealt with high-volume customers willing to exchange
at least $5,000 per transaction. Kalra admitted in his plea agreement that he
exchanged Bitcoin for cash from criminals, including those who received Bitcoin
from selling narcotics on the Darknet.
Kalra
established bank accounts in the names of others, including fake businesses,
which allowed him, for a time, to conceal his illicit business activities,
court papers state. Kalra also admitted to operating a kiosk – essentially an
ATM – where his customers could exchange Bitcoin for cash and vice versa. Kalra
profited from every transaction conducted on the ATM. Customers who sought to
do an exchange using this ATM were not required to provide their identities and
Kalra did not install a camera or implement any features requiring customers to
identify themselves, the plea agreement states.
Kalra also
admitted that in 2017 he exchanged approximately $400,000 in cash for Bitcoin
for an undercover agent who contacted him online and later met him in person on
multiple occasions at a coffee shop in Los Angeles. The undercover agent told
Kalra that his virtual currency were proceeds of drug trafficking, and Kalra
continued with various transactions, according to the plea agreement.
In June
2017, Kalra sold nearly two pounds of methamphetamine to an undercover law
enforcement official in exchange for $6,000. Kalra and the undercover agent
later met at a coffee shop in Signal Hill to exchange $50,000 in Bitcoin for
cash, which the undercover agent represented to Kalra was the proceeds of the
sales of the methamphetamine that Kalra had sold to the agent, the plea
agreement states.
Law
enforcement seized nearly $889,000 in cash from Kalra’s bank accounts and
vehicle, as well as approximately 54.3 Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
The maximum
possible sentence Kalra could receive for these charges is life in federal
prison.
Kalra also
faces federal criminal charges in San Antonio, Texas, that were filed earlier
this month. That case alleges Kalra conspired to commit money laundering for a
drug trafficking network that sold fraudulent prescription tablets, including
some laced with methamphetamine and fentanyl. In the plea agreement filed
today, Kalra agreed to plead guilty to those charges in Los Angeles federal
court.
This matter
was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations, the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service, IRS Criminal Investigation, and the Los Angeles Police
Department. The Federal Bureau of Investigation assisted with the
investigation.
This case is being prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorney Puneet V. Kakkar of the International
Narcotics, Money Laundering, and Racketeering Section.
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