DOJ Criminal Division chief says open source smart contract devs not criminally liable without intent

Share This Post

Justice Department (DOJ) Criminal Division head Matthew Galeotti declared that writing code without criminal intent does not constitute a crime, providing crypto developers and smart contract creators with clearer boundaries on criminal liability.

During remarks at the American Innovation Project Summit on Aug. 21, Galeotti stated:

“Our view is that merely writing code without ill intent is not a crime. Innovating new ways for the economy to store and transmit value and create wealth without ill intent is not a crime.” 

The comments represent the Justice Department’s most explicit guidance yet on developer responsibility in the digital asset ecosystem.

Developer liability limits

The Criminal Division addressed industry concerns about holding smart contract developers criminally liable for operating unlicensed money transmitting businesses. 

Galeotti stressed that developers contributing code to open source projects without specific criminal intent face no liability for aiding and abetting violations.

He explained:

“If a developer merely contributes code to an open source project without the specific intent to assist criminal conduct, aid or abet a particular crime, or join a criminal conspiracy, he or she is not criminally liable.”

Both aiding and abetting charges and conspiracy prosecutions require prosecutors to prove specific intent, establishing a higher evidentiary standard for developer cases.

The guidance directly responds to defense counsel presentations raising concerns about criminal liability for smart contract developers and code publishers not otherwise involved in peer-to-peer transactions. 

The Criminal Division acknowledged these as “complex questions of law and fact” requiring rigorous case-by-case evaluation.

Unlicensed money transmission protections

For unlicensed money transmission charges under 18 USC 1960, the department will not prosecute regulatory violations absent evidence that defendants knew specific legal requirements and willfully violated them. 

Galeotti provided specific protections for truly decentralized software that automates peer-to-peer transactions without third-party custody or control over user assets, stating:

“Where the evidence shows that software is truly decentralized and solely automates peer-to-peer transactions, and where a third party does not have custody and control over user assets, new 1960(b)(1)(C) charges against a third party will not be approved.” 

The guidance considers regulatory guidance suggesting that non-custodial crypto software does not constitute unlicensed money transmission.

Further, Galeotti established clear principles distinguishing between legitimate development and criminal conduct. 

Developers of neutral tools with no criminal intent should not be held responsible for third-party misuse of their creations. When third parties violate criminal law using developer tools, prosecutors should target the misusing party rather than well-intentioned creators.

The DOJ official described the department’s technology-neutral approach, which treats digital asset crimes identically to traditional financial violations while protecting lawful innovation from regulatory overreach.

The post DOJ Criminal Division chief says open source smart contract devs not criminally liable without intent appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Binance’s USD1 Stablecoin Push Deepens Relationship With Trump’s Crypto Platform

Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, has broadened support for USD1, the stablecoin tied to World Liberty Financial and US President Donald Trump’s crypto ventures, reports disclosed The

Historic Milestone: Tokenized Securities Move Closer to Wall Street Core as DTCC Gains SEC Clearance

Wall Street’s market infrastructure edged closer to tokenization after DTCC secured SEC no-action clearance, enabling tokenized securities with full legal protections and custody standards,

Not Just Crypto: Research Says XRP Is Moving Into Bank-Grade Payment Infrastructure

XRP is being positioned as something more than a trading asset as analysts point to signs suggesting it may be shaped for financial infrastructure over time Related Reading: Satoshi Lives Again: NYSE

XRP Whale Activity Spikes At The Bottom – A Classic Pre-Rally Signal

XRP has been under clear pressure in recent sessions, sliding toward its lowest price of the year as the broader crypto market continues to absorb heavy selling Sentiment remains fragile, and many

XRP Liquidity Scales Across Chains as wXRP Expands Through Hex Trust

Institutional-grade infrastructure is expanding XRP beyond payments as regulated wrapped XRP launches with deep liquidity, enabling cross-chain DeFi activity, new trading pairs, and broader utility

Dogecoin Tightens Up: Symmetrical Triangle Converges With High-Timeframe Wyckoff Setup

Dogecoin is entering a pivotal phase as its price action tightens within a symmetrical triangle, aligning with a high-timeframe Wyckoff setup The combination of higher lows, compressed structure, and