Odaily Planet Daily News According to the verdict, the Dutch court convicted 31-year-old Pertsev of laundering $1.2 billion through Tornado Cash. A panel of three judges sentenced Pertsev to five years and four months in prison. The court said in its final conclusion: "The court believes that legally and factually, the suspect, together with others, laundered money through Ethereum obtained by crime, and he has become accustomed to this money laundering behavior." Meanwhile, Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm's trial in the United States is scheduled to begin on September 23. Last year, U.S. prosecutors charged Storm and another co-founder, Roman Semenov, with conspiracy to launder money, conspiracy to violate sanctions, and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmission business. At the time of the prosecution, Semenov was still at large. A spokesperson for the DeFi Education Fund said they were disappointed with the outcome of Pertsev's case in the Netherlands, but believed that it should not affect the U.S. case against Storm. "As we argued in our previously filed amicus brief in the Roman Storm case, the government's theory of liability in the indictment is unprecedented," a spokesperson for the fund said in an emailed statement. "The allegations in the indictment hold software developers criminally liable years after they create open source, generally available software if that software is used by third-party bad actors with whom they had no direct or active interaction." "This is simply not current U.S. law," they added. (The Block)