A06515 Summary:
BILL NO | A06515A |
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SAME AS | No Same As |
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SPONSOR | Vanel |
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COSPNSR | |
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MLTSPNSR | |
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Add Title K Art 191 §§191.00 - 191.20, Pen L | |
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Establishes the offenses of virtual token fraud, illegal rug pulls, and private key fraud |
A06515 Memo:
Go to topNEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)   BILL NUMBER: A6515A SPONSOR: Vanel
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the penal law, in relation to establishing certain offenses relating to crypto fraud   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: Establishes certain offenses relating to crypto fraud.   SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS: Section 1 creates article 191 of the penal law of Title K of the penal law. 191.00 provides important definitions. § 191.05 creates penalties that apply to every provision of the act. § 191.10 creates the crime of virtual token fraud. § 191.15 creates the crime of illegal rug pulls. § 191.20 creates the crime of private key fraud.   DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NEW AND ORIGINAL: Removes the crime of fraudulent failure to disclose interest in virtual tokens. Amends the definition of rug pull to be based on the conduct of the actor rather than on specifying how the amount that they can sell within a certain period of time. Creates exceptions to the types of trans- actions which are not considered rug pulls. Amends definitions for clarity.   JUSTIFICATION: Blockchain technology has lately risen to the forefront of the American consciousness as the foundation for the future of secure technology. Despite the fact that the internet has become critical in both our economic and political structures, we have been held back by the lack of impenetrable technology that exists to allow us to engage in activities to our democracy and our economic system. Blockchain technology is the first type of impenetrable code, which means it cannot be hacked, manip- ulated, controlled, or destroyed by malicious parties. As a result, blockchain technology has pushed us to the brink of the future, allowing us to conduct historically risky online activities such as storing and moving money, investing, producing one-of-a-kind art, and even voting in elections. With the advancement of this new technology, it is vital to enact regu- lations that both align with the spirit of the blockchain and the neces- sity to combat fraud. Rug pulls are now wreaking havoc on the cryptocurrency industry. A rug pull is the act of an unscrupulous virtual token developer creating virtual tokens, advertising them to the masses as investments, causing them to rise steeply in price (often hundreds of thousands of percent), retaining a large supply of the tokens that they created for themselves, and then selling them all at once, causing the price to plummet instant- ly. Famous instances include Squid Game Coin ($SQU1D), which began at a price of $0.016 per coin, soared to roughly $2,861.80 per coin in only one week, and then crashed to a price of $0.0007926 in less than five minutes following the rug pull. In other words, the $SQU1D creators received a 23,000,000% return on their investment, and their investors were swindled out of millions. This bill will provide prosecutors with a clear legal framework in which to pursue these types of criminals. Private key fraud is, in many ways, analogous to stealing someone else's debit card pin. When someone obtains or discloses another person's private key for their virtual token wallet, the other person gains access to all of the virtual tokens in the owner's wallet. This frequently arises when criminal mobile app developers construct virtual token wallets that use keylogging software to steal another person's private key. In 2021, a mobile application attempting to pass itself off as a legitimate company stole, what was worth at the time, $1.6 million of Bitcoin from users through the type of action that might constitute private key fraud under this act.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 1/12/22 referred to codes 01/11/23 referred to codes 01/03/24 referred to codes   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: To be determined.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect on the thirtieth day after it shall have. become law.