“I live in Switzerland. I have guns at home. Anybody who shows up at my home with violent intentions risks being literally shot at,” Heaver warns altcoiners who send her death threats online.
Speaking to Magazine, Heaver explains that she blames memecoin founders for fueling the fiery users on Crypto Twitter.
“I mean, there’s so much responsibility on these community leaders and altcoin leaders. They’re egging on their followers to send threats and intimidate people,” Heaver declares.
As a prominent crypto lawyer in Dubai and Switzerland, Heaver has 41,200 followers — more than your average lawyer. Though not as famous as your Buterins and Heilperns, it’s still fairly impressive considering she has a care-free attitude toward it:
“If somehow they cancel me, I will continue posting on LinkedIn because I have a huge following on LinkedIn.”
Heaver is a self-proclaimed Bitcoin maxi who speaks at crypto conferences all over the world. She says that most of the threats she gets online are because she warns people to steer clear of dodgy altcoins.
When a token founder gets sued or faces legal action, she unpacks the legal jargon and spills the tea to her followers.
Most recently, she was a target of the Hex community after founder Richard Heart was hit with a lawsuit.
“I had people sending death threats against my children, saying they know which kindergarten they go to,” she says.
SEC has sued Richard Heart, aka Richard Schueler, founder of Hex, PulseChain, and PulseX
Here are key allegations:
1) Heart raised over $1B by selling tokens for his projects.
2) Misused his control of the projects, making suggestive statements about potential increases in… pic.twitter.com/XyNuaeB3sc
Heaver states she works with law enforcement to bust scammy memecoins projects.
Before jumping into crypto in 2016, Heaver worked as a lawyer in the oil and gas industry for 13 years.
“I was general counsel of the largest shipping group in the world, and I just couldn’t do it anymore. I couldn’t sit in the boardroom listening to that corporate bullshit.“
Heaver explains that her colleagues couldn’t believe she ditched her well-paying lawyer gig to work in the crypto industry. She recalls them telling her it was just filled with “money launderers and drug dealers.”
What led to Heaver’s Twitter fame?
Heaver brought her old Twitter account back to life around a year ago, even though she has had it for almost a decade.
“In July last year, I started posting for the first time, although my Twitter account is very old. I joined in 2014.”
“I made a conscious decision to post once a day,” Heaver says, despite not expecting to rack up any followers.
She explains that while she takes her crypto work with “governments in the Middle East and Eastern Europe” very seriously, Twitter is just a bit of fun for her.
She figures that’s probably why online threats aimed at her make the senders so furious — she just couldn’t give a damn.
What type of content do you do?
Heaver believes the crypto community gets way more pumped up for fun and easygoing content than all the heavy-duty stuff.
“Every time I post something very meaningful and very intelligent about the laws and very meaningful analysis, I get two likes. I get a lot more posting fun content and just making jokes and actually being myself.”
Heaver reveals that her Twitter feed is a blend of “Bitcoin-only” accounts and various political commentators.
She explains that she finds political commentary more interesting than tracking crypto prices. She asserts that in the grand scheme of things, broader political decisions hold greater significance than coins pumping 1,000x.
“I follow a lot of political commentary. That actually interests me more than which coin is doing what, because it doesn’t matter which coin does what on the biggest scale of things. What matters is the political direction.”
As for the ongoing lawsuits against Binance and Coinbase brought forth by the SEC, Heaver anticipates both “will settle without acknowledging any sort of wrongdoing on their part, and the SEC will leave them alone.”
Binance seems to care more about users than SEC and Gary put together
Federal Reserve Board of Governors member Adriana Kugler announced her resignation on Aug. 1, paving the way for a Trump nominee at the US central bank.
The chancellor has declined to rule out raising taxes on gambling after a thinktank said the move could raise £3.2bn for the public coffers and cover the cost of lifting 500,000 children out of poverty.
According to the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), hiking taxes on online casinos and slot machines could raise enough revenue to fund scrapping the two-child benefit cap, with the organisation arguing that there is “no other measure which provides comparable headline child poverty reduction per pound spent”.
The proposals have been backed by former prime minister Gordon Brown, but the Betting and Gaming Council says they are “economically reckless” and could drive punters towards the black market.
The chancellor has not ruled out taking forward the proposals, telling broadcasters that a review into gambling taxes is under way, and policies will be set out at the budget in the autumn.
The IPPR says in its report that the chancellor should consider increasing taxes on online casinos from 21% to 50% and raising those on slots and gaming machines from 20% to 50%, as well as raising general betting duty on non-racing bets from 15% to 25% which it said would bring other sports in line with the rates paid by horse racing.
These measures could bring in £3.2bn for the Treasury, which would cover the cost of lifting the two-child benefit cap.
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Image: Former prime minister Gordon Brown is backing the proposals. Pic: PA
The cap was introduced by the Conservative government in April 2017, and it restricts universal credit and child tax credits to the first two children in a family, where the third or subsequent children are born after this date.
According to the thinktank’s analysis of data from the Department for Work and Pensions, 115,000 families are affected, with an average financial impact of £60 per week.
Overall, the policy is keeping over 450,000 in poverty currently, which is set to rise to 550,000 by the end of the decade, it adds.
The IPPR says raising these taxes is unlikely to reduce overall revenue for the Exchequer because firms are likely to “seek to protect their bottom lines by worsening odds”, which means a “strong possibility of higher government revenue” than their forecasts expect.
‘An investment in our children’s future’
Henry Parkes, principal economist and head of quantitative research at IPPR, said in a statement: “The gambling industry is highly profitable, yet is exempt from paying VAT and often pays no corporation tax, with many online firms based offshore. It is also inescapable that gambling causes serious harm, especially in its most high-stakes forms.
“Set against a context of stark and rising levels of child poverty, it only feels fair to ask this industry to contribute a little more.”
Progressive campaign group 38 Degrees has started a petition calling on the government to implement the proposals, and former prime minister Gordon Brown said in a statement: “Gambling will not build a brighter future for our children. But taxing it properly might just get them properly nourished. Decent clothes. A warm bed. And the full stomachs that let them fill their brains in school.
“Taxing the betting industry to support our children won’t be a gamble. It will be an investment in their future. One where everyone wins.”
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4:38
How I got caught up in AI-powered illegal gambling scam
Proposals ‘would do more harm than good’
The government has long been facing calls from its own backbenches to scrap the two-child benefit cap, and has not ruled it out doing so as part of a broader package of measures to tackle child poverty, due to be published in the autumn.
Speaking to broadcasters this afternoon, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said she speaks to the former premier “regularly”, and, like him, is “deeply concerned around the levels of child poverty in Britain”.
She continued: “We’re a Labour government. Of course we care about child poverty. That’s why one of the first things we did as a government was to set up a child poverty taskforce that will be reporting in the autumn and respond to it then.
“And on gambling taxes, we’ve already launched a review into gambling taxes. We’re taking evidence on that at the moment and, again, we’ll set out our policies in the normal way, in our budget later this year.”
But the Betting and Gaming Council says raising taxes on its members is not a sound way of funding measures to reduce poverty, with a spokesperson saying the proposals are “economically reckless, factually misleading, and risk driving huge numbers to the growing, unsafe, unregulated gambling black market, which doesn’t protect consumers and contributes zero tax”.
They added: “Further tax rises, fresh off the back of government reforms which cost the sector over a billion in lost revenue, would do more harm than good – for punters, jobs, growth and public finances.”