UK woman jailed for laundering crypto tied to US$5.6 billion fraud
A WOMAN was sentenced to six years and eight months in jail for laundering massive amounts of Bitcoin linked to a US$5.6 billion investment fraud in China.
Jian Wen, a former fast food worker who transformed her life with a luxurious lifestyle, was found guilty of money laundering linked to about 150 Bitcoin for a Chinese woman between 2017 and 2022. In the wider operation, the police seized over 61,000 Bitcoin, now worth over US$4 billion.
“This was an offense which was sophisticated and involved significant planning,” judge Sally-Ann Hales said on Friday (May 24), as she handed down the sentence. “I am in no doubt that you knew what you were dealing with.”
Wen, who holds British and Chinese citizenship, consistently denied all allegations against her and is appealing her conviction. She said she was a victim and only followed instructions from a women described as the “mastermind” by her lawyers. Wen didn’t know the money was obtained in a fraud, her lawyer said. She was not accused of any role in the underlying fraud in China.
Instead she was “duped and used” and she “bitterly regrets her involvement” with the alleged mastermind, her lawyer Mark Harries said during the Friday hearing.
The prosecution insisted that Wen was driven by greed and financial gains and was the decision maker for the crypto wallet in her control.
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In March, the jury found Wen guilty of one count of money laundering after the prosecution showed thousands of pieces of evidence including WhatsApp messages between the Wen and the alleged mastermind in a nearly two-month long trial.
The trial also highlighted the role of a series of intermediaries and professionals in London and Dubai who helped the two women launder Bitcoin and buy assets in the UK, Europe and Dubai.
The 42-year-old British citizen went from living in the basement of an east London Chinese takeaway where she was employed, to a six-bedroom mansion in a leafy suburb, spending thousands on luxury shopping sprees at Harrods after she started working for the now-arrested fugitive.
“I am in no doubt that you came to enjoy the better things in life,” the judge said. BLOOMBERG
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