Bitcoins Are Out for OKPay Payment Processor

Posted on: May 29, 2013, 05:10h. 

Last updated on: May 29, 2013, 04:11h.

bitcoin_euroAnd so it starts; a few weeks after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) moved in to interrupt fund transfers between Iowa-based online payment processor Dwolla and Tokyo-based online exchange Mt. Gox, OKPay has decided to stop accepting Bitcoins, the popular cyber currency. While no public explanation for the OKPay move was given, it’s pretty clear these companies want no problems from the Department of Justice (DoJ) or Homeland Security, and looks like this outfit is just prophylactically distancing itself from any potential problems down the road. The announcement of the move came on the company’s website.

No Money Laundering

The issues, of course, center around Homeland Security’s watching out for any potential money laundering that might be going on via these sites. As such, OKPay issued this statement about their decision to end Bitcoin acceptance:  “ [We want to] reduce the risks and potential dangers in connection with anti-money laundering legislation. Any financial transactions involving exchangers and stock exchanges trading bitcoin are now prohibited.” In other words, DHS, please leave us alone, we don’t want any problems.

In retaliation, perhaps, Mt. Gox, who up until now has used OKPay as a deposit conduit for customers, announced via press release that it is cutting ties with OKPay and will not take deposits from them anymore.

Crackdown Widens

In addition to the DHS asset freeze a few weeks ago,  another financial outfit, Liberty Reserve, was shut down recently as part of a money laundering investigation being conducted cooperatively between law enforcement agencies in both the U.S. and Costa Rica.  Liberty’s founder, Arthur Budovsky Belanchuk, was arrested in Spain as part of the sting.

While Liberty itself is not a Bitcoin processor, it’s clear that all these companies are now paying attention to DHS and the DoJ, as far as their fairly new focus on alternative payments to traditional dollars, euros and pounds. Bitcoin was created about a decade ago specifically to be a method of payment that was undetectable and unregulatable by law enforcement, and while its popularity has grown, it is still far from a mainstream currency option. Looks like it may die on the vine with the Feds new incisive watchdog tactics surrounding it.

In addition to the unwanted attention from authorities, Bitcoin processing has posed some other issues for users and payment clearing operators alike; it’s been criticized for its relatively volatile exchange rate,  inflexible supply, and minimal use in trade beyond gambling sites.