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Assistant Attorney General Galeotti’s Talk On Crypto Devs Changes Very Little

By WebDeskAugust 22, 20256 Mins Read
Assistant Attorney General Galeotti’s Talk On Crypto Devs Changes Very Little
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Today, Acting Assistant Attorney General (AAAG) of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice (DoJ) Matthew Galeotti gave a talk at an event hosted by the American Innovation Project in which he harped on the point that the DoJ will no longer prosecute open-source crypto developers who have no intent to commit a crime.

AAAG Galeotti began his talk by telling the audience that Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Todd Blanche had asked Galeotti to speak to the audience about the DoJ’s focus on “even-handed enforcement of the law” in the digital asset space.

In AAAG Galeotti’s talk, he referenced a memo DAG Blanche issued in April, in which DAG Blanche stated that the DoJ would end its regulation by enforcement approach, popularized by the Biden administration, as it pertains to the crypto industry and crypto developers.

AAAG Galeotti reiterated and reinforced some of the points from the Blanche memo, producing a number of quotable moments in the process.

Here are some of the high notes he hit:

“The Department will not use federal criminal statutes to fashion a new regulatory regime over the digital asset industry. The department will not use indictments as a lawmaking tool. The Department cannot leave innovators guessing as to what could lead to criminal prosecution.”

“Our view is that merely writing code without ill intent is not a crime. Innovating new ways for the economy to store and transmit value and create wealth without ill intent is not a crime.”

“Generally, developers of neutral tools, with no criminal intent, should not be held responsible for someone else’s misuse of those tools. If a third-party’s misuse violates criminal law, that third-party should be prosecuted — not the well-intentioned developer.”

Prominent voices from the crypto industry posted some of these promising quotes on X:

1/ For too long, crypto and open source developers in the US have been living under a cloud of doubt. That uncertainty ends today, with an emphatic statement from the DOJ that *shipping code is not a crime.*

— Katie Biber (@katiebiber) August 21, 2025