In late April, at the government’s request, an Indiana federal judge put a final end to the prosecution of an Indiana man for allegations that he engaged in unlicensed money transmission (and related tax offenses) in connection with his operation of a virtual currency exchange from 2009 to 2013. The case represents a relatively rare instance in which a court granted a pretrial motion to dismiss charges related to unlicensed money transmission, although the impact of the decision may be limited to cases from 2013 and earlier—the year that FinCEN issued key guidance on the topic. The case has also attracted attention for what it may signal about DOJ’s digital asset enforcement priorities.

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Photo of Marina Olman-Pal Marina Olman-Pal

Marina Olman-Pal, Co-Chair of the firm’s Financial, Regulatory & Compliance Practice, advises foreign and U.S. financial institutions on a broad range of regulatory matters including licensing, acquisitions, divestitures, compliance with Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)/anti-money laundering (AML) laws and regulations, and compliance with Office…

Marina Olman-Pal, Co-Chair of the firm’s Financial, Regulatory & Compliance Practice, advises foreign and U.S. financial institutions on a broad range of regulatory matters including licensing, acquisitions, divestitures, compliance with Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)/anti-money laundering (AML) laws and regulations, and compliance with Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions programs. Marina counsels a wide range of companies in the financial services sector including, domestic and foreign banks, gaming companies, money services businesses including money transmitters, cryptocurrency businesses, Fintech companies and digital payment companies. Throughout her career, Marina has represented clients before U.S. regulators such as the Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, FinCEN, OFAC, the Florida Office of Financial Regulation and other state supervisory authorities. Marina also regularly develops anti-money laundering programs for a wide range of financial services businesses and non-financial services businesses including, U.S. and foreign companies active in industries such as real estate, hospitality, automotive and artificial intelligence, among many others.

Photo of Jasmine Sharma‡ Jasmine Sharma‡

Jasmine Sharma is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Washington, D.C., office. She represents individuals and corporate clients in all facets of litigation, including complex civil litigation, appeals, white-collar defense, and government investigations. She is experienced in virtually all phases…

Jasmine Sharma is a member of the Litigation Practice in Greenberg Traurig’s Washington, D.C., office. She represents individuals and corporate clients in all facets of litigation, including complex civil litigation, appeals, white-collar defense, and government investigations. She is experienced in virtually all phases of litigation, including pre-suit negotiations and investigations, pretrial critical motion practice and pleadings, fact and expert discovery, trials, and appeals.

Prior to joining the firm, she served as a judicial law clerk in both the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois.

Prior to her two federal clerkships, Jasmine was a litigation associate at an international law firm where she served as the Concordance Legal Fellow. In that role, she spent half her time as a litigation associate working on commercial, appellate, white collar, and securities litigation matters, and with the remainder of her time she led the legal services arm of a nonprofit reentry program for recently released prisoners.

 Admitted in Illinois and Missouri. Not admitted in the District of Columbia. Practice in D.C. supervised by shareholders admitted to practice in D.C.