The Department of Justice to disband cryptocurrency enforcement unit

The Trump administration has disbanded Justice Department troops responsible for investigating cryptocurrency crimes, criticizing the Biden administration for being too aggressive towards the fast-growing industry.

In a memo issued late Monday, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche denounced his predecessor for investigating cryptocurrency operators in a way that he was called “pregnant and not executed properly.” He instead directed the department to narrow the focus of cryptocurrency investigations into crimes such as fraud, drug trafficking and terrorism.

The directive coincides with President Trump’s broad embrace of the crypto industry during his campaign and as he moves to ease enforcement.

The Trump family expanded business profits in the industry, including establishing a crypto venture, World Liberty Financial. Just before he took office, Trump issued his own memo coin. Trump Media & Technology Group, a social media company whose majority shareholder, also said it plans to introduce many digital asset investment products this year.

The Department of Justice directive follows a similar move in the Securities and Exchange Commission. This dismissed lawsuits and pending investigations that included issues that the crypto company had not registered as an exchange. Many SEC attorneys in these cases have left the regulatory authority.

The SEC has also significantly reduced staffing for crypto enforcement units. On a policy issue, the SEC says it will not attempt to regulate memokine because novelty digital assets are not securities.

In its memo, the Justice Department accused the Biden administration of “a reckless regulatory strategy through prosecution” towards the world of digital currency.

Going forward, Blanche writes that prosecutors should only pursue cryptocurrency cases that “include the actions of victim investors,” and that fund fraud, hacking, and other crimes such as fentanyl and human trafficking. The prosecution said “is important to restore stolen funds to customers and build investors’ trust in the security of the digital asset market and the growth of the digital asset industry.”

He ordered a group of prosecutors investigating market integrity and major fraud to halt the pursuit of cryptocurrency enforcement and instead focus on immigration issues and contractor fraud.

He also disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement team, a group within the Department of Justice headquarters that was recently created to handle such cases. Blanche writes that the office of a personal lawyer may still pursue cases that include cryptocurrency investigations.

This new approach appears to be aimed at preventing cases like those submitted in 2023 against Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, a violation of the Bank’s Secret Act. The company has agreed to pay a $4.3 billion fine as part of its guilty plea.

During the first days of the administration, Trump officials signaled their dissatisfaction with such cases when they effectively demoted the prosecutor who founded the cryptocurrency enforcement team, Eun Young Choi.

The team was created in 2022 to help prosecutors penetrate the frequently vague world of cryptocurrency as cross-border criminals began to use digital money more and more to promote crime.

Matthew Goldstein Contributed with a report from New York.

Source: www.nytimes.com

Five nurses at Massachusetts Hospital working together in the same unit diagnosed with brain tumors

An investigation is underway at a Boston area hospital involving five nurses who worked in the same department and developed brain tumors.

Mass General Brigham Newton Wellesley Hospital reported a total of 11 employees in the fifth floor obstetrics department have raised health concerns, with five of them being diagnosed with benign brain tumors. Two of these tumors are meningiomas, the most common and benign types of brain tumors.

“The investigation did not find any environmental risks associated with the development of brain tumors,” said hospital administrator Jonathan Sonis, in a statement alongside Associate Nurse Sandy Muse Jonathan Sonis.

The hospital conducted the investigation in collaboration with government health and safety officials, ruling out disposable masks, water supplies, nearby X-rays, and chemotherapy treatments as possible sources of the issue.

“Based on these findings, we can assure our staff and patients that there are no environmental risks within our facilities,” the administrator assured.

Exterior of Mass General Brigham Newton Wellesley Hospital in Newton, Massachusetts.
Google Maps

The Massachusetts Nurse Association, currently negotiating nurse compensation at the hospital, expressed their commitment to ongoing investigation.

The union highlighted nurses’ concerns about workplace health, leading to the discovery of individuals with tumors.

“The hospital’s environmental tests were not comprehensive, and they only spoke to a few nurses,” stated MNA spokesman Joe Markman. “The hospital cannot sweep this issue under the rug.”

The state agency and federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration are yet to provide conclusive information on the matter.

According to the American Cancer Society, a cancer cluster would involve an unusually high number of cancer cases within a specific area sharing common characteristics.

“Four out of ten people in the US develop cancer during their lifetime,” stated the association, emphasizing the frequency of cancer occurrences.

Source: www.nbcnews.com