'Fugitive' Do Kwon, wanted over $40 billion Terra Luna crypto crash, arrested in Montenegro

A screen shows the falling values of the Luna cryptocurrency, at a cryptocurrency exchange in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, May 27, 2022.
A screen shows the falling values of the Luna cryptocurrency, at a cryptocurrency exchange in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, May 27, 2022. Copyright Ryu Hyo-lim/AP
Copyright Ryu Hyo-lim/AP
By Associated Press
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Interpol was asked to arrest the South Korean following the $40 billion (€37 billion) collapse of crypto platform Terra and its two stablecoins.

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Police in Montenegro have arrested Terraform Labs founder Do Kwon, who is wanted in South Korea in connection with a $40 billion (€37 billion) crash of the firm’s cryptocurrency that devastated retail investors around the world, the country’s interior minister said on Thursday.

"Montenegrin police arrested an individual who is believed to be one of the most wanted fugitives, South Korean citizen Do Kwon," interior minister Filip Adzic said on Twitter. 

South Korea’s Justice Ministry on Friday confirmed the arrest of Kwon and another unidentified individual linked to the cryptocurrency crash and said it will proceed with steps to extradite them to South Korea. 

Both South Korea and Montenegro are signees to the European Convention on Extradition.

South Korea asked Interpol in September to circulate a "red notice" for the 31-year-old Kwon across the agency’s 195 member nations to find and apprehend him.

Kwon and the other man had been hiding in Serbia but moved to Montenegro after South Korean investigators tracked their whereabouts and asked Serbian authorities to detain them, the ministry said. 

The men were arrested at Montenegro’s Podgorica Airport while trying to depart for Dubai using fake Costa Rican passports, the ministry said.

Montenegrin authorities charged the pair with forging documents, after finding a set of Belgian passports in their luggage.

Hours after their arrest, a US district court indicted Kwon on eight charges; two counts each of securities fraud, wire fraud, commodities fraud, and conspiracy.

Kwon and five others connected to Terraform are wanted because of allegations of fraud and financial crimes in relation to the implosion of its digital currencies in May 2022.

TerraUSD was designed as a stablecoin, a type of crypto token that is pegged to stable assets like the US dollar to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. 

However, around $40 billion (€37 billion) in market value was erased for the holders of TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, after the stablecoin plunged far below its $1 peg in May.

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