Bitfinex Heist Figure Freed Early, Cites Trump-Era Law

1 hour ago by · 2 mins read

Bitfinex hacker Ilya Lichtenstein is out of prison early, and he’s crediting a Trump-era criminal justice reform bill.

Ilya Lichtenstein, the hacker behind the 2016 Bitfinex breach that saw 119,754 Bitcoin BTC $89 214 24h volatility: 1.6% Market cap: $1.78 T Vol. 24h: $31.12 B stolen, has been released from prison.

Lichtenstein attributed his early release to the First Step Act, a criminal justice reform bill signed into law by President Donald Trump in 2018.

The release closes a chapter on one of crypto’s most notorious cases.

How Trump’s Policies Affected the Lichtenstein Case

Lichtenstein and his wife, Heather “Razzlekhan” Morgan, were arrested in February 2022 for laundering the stolen crypto, valued at $4.5 billion at the time of their arrest and over $10 billion today.

Bitcoin (BTC) is currently trading around $89,447.07.

Lichtenstein was sentenced in November 2024 to five years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering and admitting to executing the hack himself.

Morgan received a lesser 18-month sentence for her role and was released in October after serving approximately eight months.

The First Step Act allows eligible federal inmates to earn time credits for participating in recidivism reduction programs, which can lead to earlier placement in pre-release custody like home confinement.

The law was a bipartisan effort aimed at reducing the federal prison population.

Trump has taken various actions seen as favorable to cryptocurrency figures, citing that he was told some cases were part of a “witch hunt” under the Biden administration.

He pardoned Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ) in October 2025.

However, in a CBS News 60 Minutes interview aired on Nov. 2, Trump said he didn’t know Zhao and didn’t recall ever meeting him, while the White House defended the pardon and denied it was influenced by Trump’s personal financial interests.

Crypto Markets Watch as Lichtenstein Gets Early Release

Lichtenstein’s early release, and his pointed crediting of a specific political act, sends a complex signal to the market.

For institutional compliance desks, it underscores the nuanced reality of sentencing for crypto-related financial crime in the U.S.

While the absolute sentence was five years, the actual time served is substantially less. This outcome will be factored into risk models concerning financial crime enforcement.

The politicization of the release, however minor, also injects a new variable into the regulatory landscape, suggesting that outcomes can be influenced by broader political currents beyond the specifics of a given case.

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