Roni Cohen-Pavon, the former chief revenue officer of cryptocurrency lending firm Celsius, has reportedly pleaded guilty to charges related to fraud and price manipulation.
According to a Sept. 13 filing in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Cohen-Pavon pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit price manipulation, securities fraud, manipulation of security prices and wire fraud. He will be free on bail until a Dec. 11 sentencing hearing.
Reuters reported the guilty plea was part of an agreement with prosecutors requiring Cohen-Pavon to make restitution to parties affected by the collapse of Celsius. Former CEO Alex Mashinsky allegedly made roughly $42 million in profits from sales of the Celsius (CEL) token by artificially inflating the price, while Cohen-Pavon earned roughly $3.6 million.
The U.S. Justice Department announced charges against the two former Celsius executives in July, but Cohen-Pavonâs whereabouts â as a resident of Israel â had been largely unknown at the time. Mashinsky pleaded not guilty to all charges and, at the time of publication, was free on a $40 million bond.
Amid the legal proceedings, a federal judge allowed U.S. authorities to freeze some of Mashinskyâs assets, including certain bank accounts and an Austin, Texas property. On Sept. 11, lawyers for the former Celsius CEO filed a motion seeking the dismissal of the Federal Trade Commissionâs case against him, arguing the allegations do not meet the standards for a claim.
Celsius Networkâs bankruptcy case, filed in July 2022, was ongoing at the time of publication. A settlement plan proposed in August will go before a bankruptcy judge in October.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altmanâs digital identity project World, formerly Worldcoin, is facing challenges in Indonesia amid local regulators temporarily suspending its registration certificates.
The Indonesian Ministry of Communications and Digital (Komdigi) has halted the Electronic System Operator Certificate Registration (TDPSE) for World and World ID over suspicious activity and alleged registration violations, the authority announced on May 4.
After the suspension, Komdigi plans to summon Worldâs local subsidiaries, PT Terang Bulan Abadi and PT Sandina Abadi Nusantara, to provide clarification on the alleged violations, it said.
According to a preliminary investigation, Worldâs PT Terang Bulan Abadi was allegedly operating without TDPSE, while PT Sandina Abadi Nusantara â the one World was using for providing its services â is allegedly involved in legal misrepresentation.
Indonesian law requires registration by all digital service providers
In the statement, Komdigi emphasized that all digital service providers in Indonesia must receive electronic registration in accordance with local laws.
Additionally, using another entityâs registration is considered a major breach of Indonesian digital operations law, the authority noted.
âWorldcoin services are recorded using TDPSE in the name of another legal entity, namely PT Sandina Abadi Nusantara,â Alexander Sabar, the Komdigiâs director general for digital supervision, said in the announcement, adding:
âNoncompliance with registration obligations and the use of the identity of another legal entity to carry out digital services is a serious violation.â
Community action required
According to Sabar, Worldâs temporary suspension in Indonesia is a measure taken to prevent potential risks to the community.
He mentioned that the digital ministry is committed to overseeing the digital ecosystem fairly and strictly to ensure the security of the national digital space.
Alexander Sabar is the head of Indonesiaâs newly established Digital Space Monitoring Directorate General. Source: Komdigi
A proper supervision would require active participation from the community, Sabar added, stating:
“We invite the public to help maintain a safe and trusted digital space for all citizens. Komdigi also appeals to the public to remain vigilant against unauthorized digital services, and to immediately report suspected violations through the official public complaint channel.â
In the meantime, the community has apparently been divided over action by Komdigi.
âGood job Indonesia â at least somebody is standing up to that scam,â one commentator wrote on Reddit.
Others fired back, hinting at potential benefits stemming from Worldâs offering in Indonesia for the general public.
âIf giving up your iris biometrics means you can feed your loved ones for a few weeks, that might be a trade worth making. In the end, it all depends on what matters most to you,â another Redditor said.
Worldâs latest news from Indonesia follows Worldâs debut in the United States in May 2025, with the platform rolling out its digital identity tech in six cities initially.
US President Donald Trump gave clashing answers to whether he has profited from the crypto memecoin he launched in January, just days before he re-entered the White House.
In a wide-ranging interview with Kristen Welker on NBC Newsâ Meet the Press released on May 4, Trump said he was ânot profiting from anythingâ when asked to respond to critics who said heâs profiting from the presidency through the memecoin.
âSo youâre not profiting off of the cryptocurrency at all?â Welker asked Trump.
âI havenât even looked,â Trump admitted.
âBut Iâll tell you what. Look, if I own stock in something and I do a good job, and the stock market goes up, I guess Iâm profiting.â
Trump launched his memecoin, Official Trump (TRUMP), on Jan. 17, which hit a peak of $73.43 two days later, just a day before he was inaugurated as president on Jan. 20, according to CoinGecko.
The token has been in a steady decline since launch, but it surged late last month after its website offered top holders a chance to dine with Trump on May 22. It’s currently trading at $11.35, down nearly 85% from its peak.
Trump was apparently unaware of his tokenâs recent surge, repeatedly asking how much it was now worth. Â
Two companies, CIC Digital LLC, an affiliate of Trumpâs sprawling Trump Organization, and Fight Fight Fight LLC, which is co-owned by CIC Digital, together own 80% of the tokenâs total 1 billion supply.
Most of those tokens are locked up and will be released over the next three years. The first unlock on April 18 saw 40 million tokens, worth $454 million, go to CIC Digital.Â
Trump-controlled entities own 80% of the TRUMP token supply, which will be released periodically until 2028. Source: Trump Meme
Trumpâs memecoin project has made at least $350 million so far, according to a March analysis from the Financial Times, which found those behind the token made $314 million from selling them and $36 million from fees.
Trump has been criticized over his many crypto dealings, which his opponents say are a conflict of interest as he looks to unburden the sector from regulators.Â
Even those in his own party, Republican Senators Cynthia Lummis and Lisa Murkowski, have criticized Trumpâs dinner offer to his top tokenholders.Â
Trump said during the interview that he would contribute his presidential salary âback to the government,â prompting Welker to ask if he would also contribute any potential crypto earnings.
âI never thought of that,â Trump answered. âI mean, should I contribute all of my real estate that Iâve owned for many years if it goes up a little bit because Iâm president and doing a good job? I donât think so.â
Trump reiterates crypto commitment
In a part of the interview, Trump made a meandering statement that reiterated his campaign promise to support crypto.
âI want crypto. I think cryptoâs important because if we donât do it, Chinaâs going to. And itâs new, itâs very popular, itâs very hot,â he said.
Trump claimed former President Joe Biden âwent after it violently, and then, before the election, he changed his tune entirelyâ to garner the crypto vote. Biden did not run against Trump in the last election, instead handing the baton to then-Vice President Kamala Harris.
The Australian crypto industry has called on the newly reelected Labor government to urgently make digital asset legislation a top priority to ensure Australia doesnât fall further behind global markets.
The incumbent Australian Labor Party was returned in a landslide on May 3, picking up 54.9% of the two-party-preferred vote, against the Liberal and National Parties on 45.1%. Both parties went to the election promising crypto law reform, but only the opposition pledged to deliver draft legislation within 100 days.
Joy Lam, Binanceâs head of global regulatory and APAC legal, said the exchange has been consulting with Treasury officials since late 2023 about its proposed legislation, and it was now time for action.
âTiming is really quite critical now because obviously it’s something that has been discussed and kicked around for quite a few years,â she told Cointelegraph.
Coinbase managing director for APAC John OâLoghlen said the reelected Albanese Government has the âopportunity and the responsibility to move quickly on this issueâ and called for a Crypto-Asset Taskforce to be established within its first 100 days âwith the aim of bringing forward legislation that protects consumers, promotes innovation, and stops the exodus of talent and capital to other markets.â
Reelected Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Source: Anthony Albanese
BTC Markets CEO Caroline Bowler said thatâbeyond the political implications, this result sets the stage for meaningful progress in Australiaâs approach to digital asset regulation.â
âSo there’s a very clear shift. Everyone’s moving towards providing the regulatory framework that is needed for the industry to develop in a sustainable way. So time is really of the essence now.â
Draft crypto legislation within months
Treasurer Jim Chalmersâ office told Cointelegraph that exposure draft legislation would be released sometime this year for consultation, and any legislated reforms would be âphased in over time to minimize disruptions to existing businesses.â
Although the Treasury has draft legislation on âregulating digital asset platformsâ and âpayments system modernizationâ scheduled for release by the end of June, Lam isnât confident. “I don’t know whether this quarter specifically is still sort of the timeline,â she said.
While the ALP has been attacked by some over not taking any action in its first term in government, that may actually have resulted in a better outcome than legislation that took its cues from the approach of Joe Bidenâs administration, which took a hard line on banks dealing with cryptocurrency and viewed most coins as securities.Â
Industry figures report a noticeable evolution in the governmentâs approach to crypto between when proposals were first put out for consultation at the end of 2023 and when the Treasury released its much more positive âStatement on Developing an innovative Australian digital asset industryâ in March this year.
Australia Votes running tally on the Australian election. Source: ABC
The statement sets out key priorities, such as using the existing Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) regime to underpin the regulation of Digital Asset Platforms and payment stablecoins. Itâs focused on the safe custody of client assets by centralized providers and sidesteps issues around decentralized finance platforms.Â
Lam welcomed the use of the AFSL regime. âObviously, we don’t need to reinvent the wheel,â she said. âItâs something that people know and understand. It’s a pretty sensible move, and itâs also going to be much easier for regulators.â
Tokenization and sandbox
The government will also review the Enhanced Regulatory Sandbox, which aims to provide space for innovative digital asset startups to grow free of red tape. The statement also highlights opportunities with tokenization.
Lam said the change in emphasis showed the government has been listening to the industry.Â
âIt reflects the industry feedback that they would have received in 2023 as a result of the consultation, as well as the changing landscape because obviously itâs been evolving pretty quickly internationally,â Lam said.
âThey do have the benefit now of looking at what has worked and hasnât worked in other jurisdictions, and really building on those lessons.â
Dea Markovy, policy director at Fireblocks, told Cointelegraph that âa lot of the groundwork and research is doneâ and it was looking broadly positive.
âOf course, a lot of details are still to come around Australiaâs Digital Asset Platforms (DAPs) regime. What is significant here is the willingness of the Government to cut through the complexity and uncertainty on crypto intermediaries licensing.âÂ
The securities regulator ASIC released its own crypto regulations proposals (INFO 225) in December, and feedback from those consultations will help inform the government’s new legislation.Â
âIn essence, it details how different token issuances and crypto intermediation will fit into Australiaâs existing securities legislation, providing for a transition period,” explained Markovy.
The draft guidance suggests NFTs, in-game assets and memecoins are not financial products â the local equivalent of a âsecurityâ â while a yield-bearing stablecoin or a gold-backed token probably are.
The Treasury statement also highlighted issues with debanking. Lam said that simply regulating the industry would go a long way toward solving the issue.
âWhat we really want from governments and regulators is that clean licensing framework, because that goes a long way to mitigating the risk and giving the banks the comfort that they need,â she said. âAnd then, thereâs probably going to need to be some additional guidance given to banks.â