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Terraform's Lead Architect, Do Kwon, Admits Guilt over Company's Demise

Admitters the Co-Founder and ex-CEO of the collapsed blockchain protocol to deceitful practices that saw billions in losses for investors and users.

Terraform founder Do Kwon Admits Guilt in Company's Demise
Terraform founder Do Kwon Admits Guilt in Company's Demise

Terraform's Lead Architect, Do Kwon, Admits Guilt over Company's Demise

In a landmark decision, the former head of Terraform, Do Kwon, pleaded guilty to commodities, securities, and wire fraud, and wire fraud connected to deceitful schemes at Terraform. This plea, made on August 12, 2025, in a U.S. federal court, set a significant precedent in applying accountability to crypto innovators exploiting regulatory gaps.

Terraform, a decentralized financial ecosystem launched in 2018, promised a variety of financial products. The ecosystem, which distinguished its blockchain by issuing algorithmic stablecoins under the Terra Protocol, was founded with the launch of the dollar-pegged TerraUSD (UST) around September 2020. At its peak, Do Kwon became one of the most affluent leaders in the industry.

However, the TerraUSD's dollar peg began to break down in May 2022. This catastrophic collapse led to UST losing its peg to the US dollar, falling below $0.20, while Luna's price crashed from about $120 in April to almost zero in days. The crash erased approximately $40 to $80 billion in investor value. The collapse was triggered by rapid large-scale unstaking and selling of UST out of the Anchor Protocol, combined with flawed tokenomics and excessive reliance on unsustainable yields.

Post-collapse, the original Terra blockchain was split. The original Luna became Luna Classic (LUNC), and a new Terra blockchain (LUNA 2.0) was created as part of Do Kwon’s recovery attempt.

Investigations by U.S. authorities, including the SEC and the Department of Justice (DOJ), focused on Do Kwon and Terraform Labs for alleged fraud and manipulation connected to the Terra collapse. Charges covered fraud and money laundering related to manipulation of the algorithmic stablecoin UST.

Investors and users of Terraform were unaware that the instruments offered did not function as intended. For instance, Chai, a Korean payments platform advertised to use the Terra blockchain for transactions since June 2019, in fact, used traditional methods and networks. Similarly, Mirror Protocol, launched in December 2020, allowed users to create, buy, and sell synthetic assets using the Terra blockchain. However, Terraform controlled the protocol and manipulated asset prices with trading bots.

Do Kwon received funding from various investment firms, primarily for purchasing or loaning cryptocurrencies created on the Terra blockchain. The Luna Foundation Guard Ltd ("LFG"), launched in January 2022, claimed to maintain a cryptocurrency reserve for UST's dollar peg, but in reality, Terraform controlled it.

Do Kwon used the technological promise and investment euphoria around cryptocurrency to commit a large-scale fraud. He was captured in Europe in March 2023 using a fake passport, and was deported to the United States at the end of the year.

The U.S attorney for the Southern District of New York, Jay Clayton, announced the guilty plea. Do Kwon's sentencing by Judge Engelmayer is scheduled for December 11, 2025.

The case accelerated regulatory crackdowns globally. The SEC secured a $4.55 billion civil settlement against related parties, and the DOJ is pursuing criminal penalties. The Terra case has become emblematic of the risks of unregulated crypto innovation and has driven increased demand for transparency and projects with real-world utility.

References: 1. CoinDesk 2. CoinTelegraph 3. Bloomberg 4. Reuters 5. Financial Times

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