Exclusive: Former FBI director Louis Freeh is going crypto

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Tether, the Hong Kong-based company behind the cryptocurrency of the same name, has been the subject of fierce scrutiny in the crypto world all year. Tether, the digital token, is meant to be a 1-to-1 surrogate for the U.S. dollar, a “stablecoin” that bitcoin holders can trade into as a safer store of value. That’s why the price of tether has basically stayed at $1 for its lifetime, with the exception of a couple swings in 2017 to as low as 80 cents and as high as $1.80.

Tether, the company, insists all tether tokens are backed by U.S. dollars that Tether holds in reserve. Regulators have been skeptical of that claim.

In December 2017, the CFTC subpoenaed Tether and Bitfinex, a huge bitcoin exchange that began offering tether in 2015. Bitfinex CEO Jan Ludovicus is also CEO of Tether, but has insisted the two companies are completely separate. Major media outlets have pointed to the “mystery” of the relationship between Tether and Bitfinex, and questioned whether Tether has the reserves it claims to have.

The heat led Tether to hire Freeh, Sporkin & Sullivan (FSS), the Washington, D.C., law firm of former FBI director Louis Freeh, to conduct an investigation of its compliance and transparency, including a check of its bank balances. In June, Tether publicly posted the confidential report from FSS containing its findings.

The crux of Freeh’s report: Tether indeed holds the balance it claims to hold. On June 1, without Tether or its two banks knowing the selected date ahead of time, FSS performed an “account snapshot” and found that Tether held a total of $2.545 billion, which indeed covered the 2.538 billion tether coins in circulation at the time, plus a cushion of about $7 million.

Louis Freeh at a July 12, 2012 news conference in Philadelphia regarding Penn State University’s handling of Jerry Sandusky. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Louis Freeh at a July 12, 2012 news conference in Philadelphia regarding Penn State University’s handling of Jerry Sandusky. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Hiring Louis Freeh to handle a compliance investigation is akin to bringing in the big dogs. He has investigated Penn State University, FIFA, Daimler Chrysler, and others. When a large public company, small private company, government group or educational institution taps Freeh, it is an attempt to say: We are serious about this. The same is true of former FBI director Robert Mueller, currently special counsel for the Russia investigation. As Fortune wrote in 2013, “There simply aren’t many former FBI directors out there.”

Nonetheless, skeptics have questioned Freeh’s report on Tether.

In an exclusive interview with Yahoo Finance, Freeh discussed the Tether investigation, which was his first ever cryptocurrency-related work. He says his firm expects to take on more crypto jobs—and is staffing up to prepare for them.

Background: Tether and Bitfinex

The controversy over Tether went mainstream on June 13, when an academic paper out of the University of Texas concluded that bitcoin’s big price surge at the end of 2017 was partly due to market manipulation of tether on Bitfinex.