Roman Storm's Defense Team Wants to Know if DOJ Withheld Evidence
Storm's attorneys filed a letter Friday asking a judge to order prosecutors to review their records.

What to know:
- Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's attorneys asked a federal judge to review its materials to see if there's anything that could help him, claiming the Department of Justice was playing "fast and loose" with its Brady obligations.
- The letter referenced a recent filing in the DOJ's case against Samourai Wallet.
Roman Storm's defense team wants to know if the U.S. Department of Justice is withholding any information that may help the Tornado Cash developer's case.
In a letter filed late Friday, defense attorneys said recent disclosures in another, somewhat similar, case raised concerns that prosecutors either misled the judge overseeing the case or otherwise was playing "fast and loose",
"The defense recently learned that the government has possessed exculpatory materials since August 2023 that go to the heart of a fundamental issue in this case: whether a noncustodial cryptocurrency mixer is a 'money transmitting business' for purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 1960," the filing said. "The government’s failure to produce those materials in the fall of 2023, when Roman Storm was indicted and first appeared in court, constitutes a Brady violation that has materially prejudiced his defense," even after the DOJ said it would drop a portion of its case against Storm.
Read more: Conduct Versus Code May Be the Defining Question in Roman Storm Prosecution
Storm's team is referencing the DOJ's case against two developers of Samourai Wallet, another crypto mixer
Prosecutors denied the allegations in a court filing, saying their disclosures were timely and that the FinCEN officials' views were not formal guidance.
The DOJ said the two cases are only "superficially similar," the defense filing said Friday.
"But what the government characterizes as a superficial similarity is, in fact, the core feature that lies at the heart of the conflicting interpretations of FinCEN guidance and the scope of Section 1960:
the noncustodial nature of both protocols," the filing said. "That users exercised sole control over their assets was a basis for Mr. Storm’s motion to dismiss and to compel discovery of FinCEN materials."
The defense is asking Judge Katherine Polk Failla, who's overseeing the case, to order the DOJ to review any materials it may have that could help Storm's case
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