Federal prosecutors aren't holding back. The U.S. Department of Justice wants a judge to hand Terra founder Do Kwon the full 12 years allowed under his August plea agreement, arguing that the magnitude of his fraud warrants the harshest sentence available.
Under that plea deal, Kwon faces a maximum request of 12 years, though the underlying conspiracy and wire fraud charges could technically carry up to 25 years. Prosecutors say the top-end sentence makes sense given what happened: Terra's collapse wiped out $40 billion in market value and caused more financial carnage than several similar cases.
The DOJ pointed to Sam Bankman-Fried's 25-year sentence as a reference point while pushing back against comparisons to Celsius founder Alex Mashinsky's 12-year term. They emphasized that Kwon allegedly tried to flee using a fake passport, and that Terra's global fallout justifies a harsher penalty, according to Decrypt.
Kwon was extradited from Montenegro after a lengthy jurisdictional fight and is scheduled for sentencing on December 11 in Manhattan federal court.
The timing is interesting because Kwon just asked the court to cap his sentence at five years, claiming he's accepted responsibility for Terra's failure. But prosecutors aren't buying it. They maintain he presided over one of the largest fraud-driven collapses in crypto history, triggering a chain reaction of bankruptcies and contagion across the industry.
When UST and LUNA imploded in May 2022, the damage spread fast. Retail investors, lenders, and hedge funds around the world got hammered. The collapse reshaped how regulators think about crypto and sparked investigations globally.
Kwon's sentencing next week will close one of the most high-profile criminal cases in crypto, though its effects keep echoing through enforcement trends, stablecoin oversight, and how institutions manage risk.