In particular, the court approved the confiscation of 140 billion won ($104 million) in profits Hyun-Seong earned for reportedly selling pre-release LUNA at a high price without informing ordinary investors, South Korean local publication YTN reported on November 17. Notably, the decision by the court comes as a pre-trial precaution to deter possible disposal of the proceeds before the accused is handed over for trial. The prosecution’s request is part of an ongoing investigation against Hyun-Seong for allegedly making profits illegally while launching the Terra ecosystem-related assets. At the same time, the accused reportedly leaked customer transaction data of his other firm Chai Corporation to Terraform Labs. Notably, freezing Hyun-Seong’s assets is part of the initial steps by South Korean authorities to build a case against Terraform Labs following Terra’s high-profile collapse.
Struggle to form case against Terraform Labs founders
Although regulators are accusing the platform’s founder, Do Kwon, of violating the country’s capital market laws, a recent report indicated that the government was struggling to form a concrete case against Terraform Labs. At the center of the issue is the lack of laws specifically targeting the cryptocurrency sector at a time Kwon remains on the run despite an existing Interpol red notice issued against him. Besides denying being on the run, Kwon also maintains his innocence over allegations of engineering the collapse of the Terra ecosystem. In the meantime, Kwon also has an existing arrest warrant against him. According to the prosecution, it’s making its best efforts to prove Kwon is guilty while noting that the lack of clear crypto regulations does not rule out the investigation’s progress. The prosecution’s initiative to prosecute the case was dealt a blow after the court turned down a request to detain individuals linked to the Terraform Labs ecosystem.