Indian Police Arrest Unocoin Co-Founder, Claim Operating Bitcoin ATM Kiosk is Illegal

Law enforcement officers in India have arrested Unocoin’s co-founder for operating a Bitcoin ATM kiosk, which the police called illegal. More arrests are likely, according to the police.

Law Enforcement in India Expects to Make Further Arrests After Jailing Unocoin Co-Founder

The co-founder of India’s first bitcoin ATM kiosk was arrested yesterday, the Times of India reported. Harish BV was presented before the court, which sent him to police custody for seven days. Fellow co-founder Sathvik Viswanath explained the firm’s business model and its legality.

“We got a lot of bad press after the finance minister announced a ban in February 2018. The minister’s statement was clear: Cryptocurrencies are not legal tender in India. He did not say ‘illegal tender.’ There’s a huge difference. It means you bear the risk of your investment and there’s no regulation for the industry.”

Funded by 45 top investors, including Digital Currency Group, Boost VC, Blume Ventures, and FundersClub, the company claims it has reached more than 1.2 million customers since being founded in July 2013. Unocoin enables Indians to buy and sell Bitcoin in exchange for Indian Rupees (INR), as well as store, use and accept the cryptocurrency.

The Indian police seized a teller machine, two laptops, a mobile, three credit cards, five debit cards, a passport, five seals of Unocoin company, a cryptocurrency device and 180,000 rupees, approximately $2,450. The police don’t believe Harish BV’s explanation, a source in the Central Crime Branch told The Times of India.

“The accused claims he’s running the kiosk for six months. We think he’s misleading us.”

While the Indian government announced plans to launch a government-backed cryptocurrency, public authorities, including the Central Bank, continue to attack cryptocurrency exchanges. The RBI has said cryptocurrencies are neither currency nor money and they can’t even be considered as a valid payment system. In April, the central bank prohibited banks from working with cryptocurrency exchanges.

The finance ministry panel was expected to release its proposal on cryptocurrency regulations in July, but this was delayed for an unforeseeable amount of time. For now, the public understanding is that entities regulated by RBI are not allowed to deal with “any individual or business entities dealing with or settling cryptocurrencies.”

This has led operators such as Unocoin to use cash within the crypto trading framework to bypass the online banking limitations. The operator, however, attempted to work within legality by imposing a cash handling restriction as per the guidelines issued by the RBI.


Featured image from Shutterstock.

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by Ricardo Esteves on October 24, 2018 at 10:30PM