Court adjourns Binance executives' tax evasion trial to May 17
A federal high court on Friday adjourned a tax evasion trial against cryptocurrency exchange Binance and two of its executives to May 17 after the matter was stalled because the exchange has not been formally served with the charges.
Binance and its
executives Tigran Gambaryan, a U.S. citizen and head of financial crime
compliance, and Nadeem Anjarwalla, a British-Kenyan who is a regional manager
for Africa, face four counts of tax evasion.
The charges include
failure to register with Nigeria's Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) for
tax remittance purposes.
Tigran Gambaryan
Gambaryan appeared in
court in Abuja on Friday but did not take a plea. Anjarwalla fled the country
last month.
Binance has not been
served the tax evasion charges by FIRS, whose lawyer argued that Gambaryan
should face the charges on the exchange's behalf.
Gambaryan's lawyer
Chukwuka Ikuazom objected, arguing that since Binance and its executives were
jointly charged, he could not take a plea until the exchange, the first
defendant in the case, had been served, according to Nigerian law.
Judge Emeka Nwite
adjourned to May 17 when he will give a ruling.
In addition to the tax
evasion trial, Binance and the executives have also been charged with
laundering more than $35 million by Nigeria's anti-graft agency, the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), in a trial that will resume on May 2.
Binance, which was not
represented in court and had no immediate comment, said on Thursday that it is
working closely with Nigeria authorities following the detention of
Gambaryan.
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