How Binance’s ‘extensive web of deception’ could lead to DOJ charges against the world’s largest crypto exchange—and its enigmatic founder

Last Monday, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a 136-page complaint against Binance and its founder Changpeng Zhao, alleging the exchange had purposefully evaded U.S. oversight through improper controls, putting billions of dollars of customer funds at risk.

“We allege that Zhao and Binance entities engaged in an extensive web of deception, conflicts of interest, lack of disclosure, and calculated evasion of the law,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said in an accompanying statement.

A week after the SEC complaint, and more than two months after similar charges from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, speculation is mounting that the Department of Justice could conclude its long-simmering case against Binance and file charges any day. Unlike the two regulatory agencies, DOJ charges likely would be criminal, not civil, and focus on money laundering across a snarl of entities under the Binance umbrella.

With the SEC focusing on Zhao’s control over Binance in its complaint, legal and money laundering experts say that the founder’s exposure to dozens of companies linked to the exchange could open him up to liability as the Department of Justice considers criminal charges.

“He’s made it complex and difficult for regulators to track,” said Kevin O’Brien, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York and current partner at Ford O’Brien Landy. “If, in fact, they’re not independent companies, this feeds into the money laundering [allegation]—he’s creating transactions that line his own pocket."

‘Very little distinction’

The two complaints from the SEC and CFTC, and hundreds of pages of accompanying exhibits, focused on the billions of dollars flowing between different Binance companies and accounts, many through U.S. banks including Silvergate and Signature.

Zhao sat at the front of many of these transactions through different entities he owned, including trading firms called Merit Peak and Sigma Chain, as well as a Seychelles company called Key Vision Development, which held customer deposits. The SEC also alleges that billions of U.S. dollars in customer funds were commingled in an account held by Merit Peak.

In a review of Binance entities shared with Fortune, the blockchain analytics firm Inca Digital found 40 associated with Zhao, with him serving as the founder, director, owner, or significant shareholder of many of them.

“Our intelligence shows that there is very little distinction between Binance and Changpeng Zhao,” said Adam Zarazinski, Inca’s CEO and a former legal advisor for the Air Force. “CZ often uses his personal name and personal accounts to circumvent laws and regulations in jurisdictions where Binance faces scrutiny.”