Seoul prosecutors allege $100 million in Swiss bank account linked to Terra co-founder Do Kwon

Why Do Kwon can't face the SEC in the U.S. — his lawyers tell all
- Prosecutors from Seoul suspect that Terraform Labs and its co-founder, Do Kwon, still possess a substantial sum of money, specifically 130 billion won ($100 million), held in a Swiss bank account.
- The Seoul Southern District Prosecutor’s Office has been closely monitoring the movement of Terra-linked Bitcoin.
Prosecutors from Seoul suspect that Terraform Labs and its co-founder, Do Kwon, still possess a substantial sum of money, specifically 130 billion won ($100 million), held in a Swiss bank account. This comes after recent legal action against ten associates of Terraform Labs, including co-founder Shin Hyun-seong, also known as Daniel Shin.
South Korean prosecutors and SEC allege Swiss bank account connection
According to local journalist Park Beom-soo, following the indictment of Terraform Labs, Do Kwon and his associates allegedly transferred 10,000 bitcoin (BTC) to Sygnum Bank, a fintech bank headquartered in Switzerland.
The Seoul Southern District Prosecutor’s Office has been closely monitoring the movement of Terra-linked Bitcoin and revealed this information during a press conference discussing the recent indictment.

The prosecutor’s office spokesperson stated, “We are actively tracking the bitcoin owned by LFG (Luna Foundation Guard), but some of it has been converted into cash and deposited into the Signum account.” The investigation into Terraform Labs and Do Kwon’s financial dealings continue, and more information may come to light.
LFG’s role in the Terra collapse
Before Terra’s collapse, Luna Foundation Guard (LFG), an organization established to protect the blockchain stablecoin UST’s dollar peg, amassed a significant amount of bitcoin. These funds were intended to prevent UST from dropping below $1 parity, but the fallout was so severe that LFG and Terra’s leaders, including Do Kwon, could not save it.

LFG released an audit claiming that they used more than 80,000 BTC to defend the coin’s peg after it was speculated that they did not use all the funds to protect the stablecoin.
However, OXT researcher Ergo BTC found that the blockchain “tells a different story.” Ergo discovered a group of fifteen significant Binance withdrawals made to a single address, which was then consolidated and used in a series of transactions spanning several months.
Ergo explained that the transactions continued for many months, leaving a trail of evidence for investigators. Park Beom-soo’s report further confirmed that the on-chain activity Ergo observed aligns more closely with the Seoul prosecutor’s report than the story told by Do Kwon and the LFG audit.
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Damilola Lawrence
Damilola Lawrence has covered news on crypto markets and tech for over 5 years. He has previously shared crypto insights and analysis for TheShibMagazine, CryptoMode, Qweens Magazine, and The Recording Academy before pivoting into Web3. At Cryptopolitan, he is a crypto price prediction specialist. After finishing a bachelor’s degree, he has segued into a master’s degree in IT Cybersecurity at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University.
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