Former CEO of Binance, CZ, has started a four-month prison sentence in California.
The founder of Binance, Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, has been sent to a federal jail in California for a term of four months. His offense was failing to put in place a sufficient know-your-customer (KYC) policy at the biggest cryptocurrency exchange in the world. Canada-born Zhao entered a guilty plea in November to charges of breaking the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA). The four months that CZ was sentenced to in April by a federal judge was more than other crypto CEOs like former BitMex CEO Arthur Hayes received for the same crime, but it was still far fewer than the three years that federal prosecutors had wanted. Based on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Zhao has a net worth of $36.5 billion, making him the richest person to have served time in a U.S. prison. Zhao agreed to resign as CEO of Binance and was fined $50 million in addition to his sentence. Along with Zhao, Binance entered a guilty plea to allegations of money laundering and violating sanctions. The charges were resolved earlier this year with Binance paying $4.3 billion in fines to federal officials and appointing an independent compliance monitor. Zhao, as convict 88087-510, will serve his brief sentence at Lompac II, a low-security facility located in Santa Barbara County on the central coast of California. There are 2,160 prisoners housed in the facility as of right now, according to records from the Bureau of Prisons. The conditions at the prison, where some of the inmates work on a nearby farm growing produce and tending to cows and horses, are very different from the notoriously dangerous facility where former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is being held in New York following his 25-year prison sentence earlier this year.