French Officials Move to Start Trial of Alleged BTC-e Operator Alexander Vinnik
The alleged BTC-e operator stands accused of extortion, aggravated money laundering and conspiracy.
Updated Sep 14, 2021 at 9:35 a.m. UTC
![Alexander Vinnik](https://www.coindesk.com/resizer/frifWOI41yj-F8KGu4hsoBoNzHY=/567x414/filters:quality(80):format(jpg)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/coindesk/4U7MMOQJVNCW5B7DFUJRCP6MSA.jpg)
French officials have officially started the ball rolling for the trial of Alexander Vinnik, the alleged operator of an exchange said to have laundered millions of dollars for criminals.
- French prosecutors filed a petition to start the lawsuit against Vinnik on Wednesday, according to a news report from L'Express.
- Vinnik was charged on the day he arrived in France in late January after been extradited from Greece.
- He stands accused of extortion, aggravated money laundering, conspiracy, and harming automatic data-processing systems as the chief of the exchange BTC-e, closed by law enforcement agencies in 2017.
- A hot wallet address for BTC-e can be seen on blockchain explorers.
- The platform from Netherlands-based Crystal Blockchain shows that, while now empty, more than 733,000 bitcoin (around $7 billion) has passed through the wallet.
- It has remained inactive since September 2017 – a few months after Vinnik was detained by the Greek authorities.
![BTC-e address displayed on Crystal Blockchain](https://www.coindesk.com/resizer/85OI5Prsz5vsts3tcefd0kT5ob4=/560x169/filters:quality(80):format(jpg)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/coindesk/NWHGSUTGJNATVPHFKCBGNMTBME.png)
- Once the French trial has concluded, Vinnik will be extradited to the U.S. and then Russia to face similar charges there.
- Vinnik has maintained he is innocent of all charges.