Bithumb Wins Court Drama: Korean Regulators Stumped, Crypto Gets a Breather

Seoul court gives Bithumb a clean break from a $27m fine, so the exchange can keep pumping crypto like a broken toaster.
South Korea decided to play a cruel game of regulatory Tag with its crypto giants, but the court just handed Bithumb the cheat sheet. The Seoul Administrative Court issued a stay of execution on the FIU’s partial suspension, meaning Bithumb can keep the lights on while it fights the fine in court. In other words, the fine’s still around, but it’s currently on a low‑maintenance vacation.
Rule one of the FIU: “Fine in the double‑digits and stop new customers for six months.” Stellar enforcement, not so much ETA. Bithumb was fined 36.8 billion won – roughly $27 million – and warned that new users would be banned from depositing or withdrawing. Classic “take a breather” approach.

FIU’s Partial Business Suspension

The FIU, acting as the neighbourhood bouncer, had already barred Bithumb from welcoming new faces. The fine was a lot of money, and the six‑month pause on new user acquisition felt like a six‑month hiatus from Instagram. But the court’s stay put the execution on the hold – so the fines still exist, yet the enforcement is now on a holding‑pen.

Bithumb’s Legal Parachute

Bithumb applied for and won a stay of execution, effectively pausing the enforcement of the penalties until the final verdict. If the justice system is a queue, this means Bithumb has moved to the front of the line – temporarily, of course – while the rest of the crypto world watches the drama unfold.

The Crack‑the‑Case Details

Authorities accused Bithumb of shenanigans in over 6.65 million trades, apparently violating multiple sections of the Specific Financial Information Act. That translates to “Bithumb, you’ve been caught blipping around on the record‑keeping side of things, and it’s time to straighten out your KYC game.”

There’s also the classic KYC snarl: Bithumb allegedly worked with unregistered VPNS, failed to verify customers, and fuzzed out transaction monitoring. The FIU felt it had a golden ticket to the court’s trouble‑making machinery, but the court apparently read that ticket with ambivalent interest.

The fine was due to kick in on March 27, but the stay pre‑empted it. Now enforcement remains on ice until a final sentence is delivered, leaving Bithumb to wonder whether it’s still a waiter or a midnight restaurant in the court system’s uncertain future.

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2026-05-01 14:45