LIVE
MARKET CAP$2.46T+1.06%
24H VOL$126.43B+1.06%
EXCHANGES1,480
BTC DOMINANCE57.0%
ETH DOMINANCE10.0%
TOP ALTBNB (3.6%)
HomeProtos

DOJ seeks October retrial for Tornado Cash dev Roman Storm

Legal & RegulatoryMarket Events
March 10, 2026
3 min read
DOJ seeks October retrial for Tornado Cash dev Roman Storm

US Attorney Jay Clayton, the former chairman of the SEC and head of the Southern District of New York, has requested a re-trial of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm on charges of conspiracy to commit money laundering and evade sanctions.

The requested date for the re-trial is October 5-12, 2026.

Clayton filed a two-page letter confirming his prosecution is willing to bring Count 1 and Count 3 of the original indictment back before a new jury.

Count 1 was a conspiracy to commit money laundering. Here, the US government alleged Storm knowingly helped criminals conceal over $1 billion in stolen crypto through Tornado Cash, including hundreds of millions from a Ronin hack involving North Korea’s Lazarus Group.

Although not up for jury re-trial, Count 2 involves a conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business. A Manhattan jury convicted Storm in August 2025 on Count 2. 

However, Storm filed a post-trial motion under Criminal Rule 29 which is due for a court to rule sometime soon, even as early as April 9, 2026. Storm hopes to gain acquittal on Count 2 on a legal technicality.

A Rule 29 motion asks a judge to declare that trial evidence was legally insufficient. Legal sufficiency of evidence is a constitutional minimum for sustaining a conviction.

The test for legal sufficiency is whether a rational trier of fact found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Rule 29 acquittals are rare but possible.

Also up for re-trial, Count 3 involved a conspiracy to violate sanctions. Specifically, prosecutors claimed Storm kept operating Tornado Cash after the US Treasury sanctioned the protocol in August 2022.

Read more: What does Roman Storm’s guilty verdict mean for the wider DeFi sector?

After five days of deliberation, jurors deadlocked on the money laundering and sanctions counts. As a result, the case was a partial mistrial.

Storm’s attorney Brian Klein said after the first trial that he expected “full vindication.” The defense has continued to fight on First Amendment, venue, and sufficiency of evidence grounds.

Storm remains free on a $2 million bail. April and October will be critical months for him this year.

Got a tip? Send us an email securely via Protos Leaks. For more informed news and investigations, follow us on X, Bluesky, and Google News, or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

The post DOJ seeks October retrial for Tornado Cash dev Roman Storm appeared first on Protos.

RELATED TOPICS

tornado cash trialroman stormmoney laundering chargessanctions violationsre trial requestUS prosecutioncryptocurrency sanctionscrypto developer courtlegal case cryptocrypto regulatory enforcement

Market Overview

BitcoinBitcoin
70,206.032.592%
EthereumEthereum
2,043.132.517%
Binance CoinBinance Coin
643.321.368%
CardanoCardano
0.26313.136%
RippleRipple
1.39142.076%

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest cryptocurrency news and insights delivered directly to your inbox.