The Tornado Cash case is far from over. The legal fight surrounding the crypto mixer and its founder, Roman Storm, is entering a new phase. US prosecutors have reportedly confirmed plans to retry the case this fall. This decision comes on the heels of the first trial, which ended without a unanimous jury verdict on key charges.
In the latest development within the prolonged Tornado Cash case, the US Department of Justice has decided to retry Roman Storm. This update was revealed by Amanda Tuminelli, Chief Legal Officer of the DeFi Education Foundation, via an X post earlier today.
Tornado Cash Case Retrial; Source: DOJ Filing
Notably, the retrial follows the first trial in the Tornado Cash case, which ended with a partial verdict. The jury found Roman Storm guilty of operating an unlicensed money transmitting business. However, the jury could not reach a unanimous decision on the charges related to money laundering and sanctions violations.
Since the jury failed to agree on several charges, the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York chose to pursue the Tornado Cash case again. Prosecutors now plan to retry Roman Storm on the remaining charges in a new trial expected later this year.
Tuminelli described it as “Incredibly disappointing news.” She added that the move comes even after the prosecutors failed to convince the jury in the first trial and faced criticism over mistakes such as calling irrelevant witnesses and misinterpreting blockchain evidence.
Fox Business journalist Eleanor Terrett also took to X to comment on the matter. Earlier today, she wrote on X, “Prosecutors proposed an early October retrial date, even as Storm’s Rule 29 motion to overturn his conviction on the unlicensed money transmitting count remains pending.”
On Monday, the US prosecutors filed a letter with Judge Katherine Polk Failla. The letter addressed their intention to retry Roman Storm in the Tornado Cash case. The retrial will reportedly focus on Counts One and Three of the superseding indictment. According to the filing, the retrial could last for about three weeks.
The DOJ asked the court to set a retrial date now to avoid scheduling delays. The prosecutors suggested a start date of October 5 or 12, 2026, noting they are prepared for a spring retrial if needed. Storm’s defense argued that scheduling a date now is premature. But they confirmed that they are available for a three-week trial in late September, early October, or early December.
Roman Storm also reacted to the DOJ’s filing. He posted on X that he will “never stop fighting for freedom.” He wrote that the two charges could carry a maximum sentence of 40 years in federal prison. He added that these charges relate to open-source code he wrote, a protocol he doesn’t control, and transactions he never handled. He added,
“A jury already couldn’t agree this was criminal. But the SDNY prosecutors want to keep trying with the hope of getting a different answer.”
Roman Storm is the co-founder of Tornado Cash, a crypto mixer that allegedly laundered over $1 billion in illicit funds. He was charged with three counts in the Tornado Cash case in 2023.
Prosecutors allege Storm helped facilitate illegal activity, but supporters argue he cannot control how others use open-source software. The case has sparked a major debate in the crypto world about developer liability and privacy in decentralized technologies.
The post Tornado Cash Case Continues: DOJ Plans Retrial for Co-Founder Roman Storm appeared first on The Coin Republic.


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