Cryptocurrency Theft Calculator

Calculate sentencing for theft of cryptocurrency and digital assets.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates only and does not constitute legal advice. Federal sentencing is complex and involves many factors not captured here, including judicial discretion, departure motions, and individual case circumstances. Consult a federal criminal defense attorney for advice specific to your situation.

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Cryptocurrency Theft – What You Need to Know

If you’re dealing with a federal case involving cryptocurrency theft, you’re facing a legal system that many attorneys frankly don’t understand well enough to handle competently. Calculate sentencing for theft of cryptocurrency and digital assets.

Federal cases in this area – whether it’s cybercrime under the CFAA, post-conviction matters like compassionate release or §2255 motions, or Bureau of Prisons sentence computation issues – require specialized knowledge that goes beyond general criminal defense. At Federal Lawyers, this is something we take very seriously. Our attorneys have specific experience handling these exact types of cases, and we know how to navigate the complexities involved.

How These Cases Work in Federal Court

The legal framework for cryptocurrency theft involves specialized statutes and guideline provisions that require deep familiarity. For cybercrime cases, the loss calculation under §2B1.1 is often the most contested issue – is “loss” the cost of remediation, the value of stolen data, the revenue the victim lost, or the defendant’s gain? Each methodology produces dramatically different numbers, and the choice of methodology often determines the guideline range.

For post-conviction matters – compassionate release, §2255 habeas motions, sentence computation disputes, supervised release revocation – the procedural requirements are exacting. Missing a filing deadline, failing to exhaust administrative remedies, or applying the wrong legal standard can result in dismissal regardless of the merits. These cases demand attorneys who understand both the substantive law and the procedural landscape.

The Supreme Court’s decision in Van Buren v. United States (2021) narrowed the scope of the CFAA, potentially providing defenses for conduct that was previously charged as federal computer fraud. If you’re facing CFAA charges, this decision could be directly relevant to your case.

What Most People Don’t Realize About Cryptocurrency Theft

In cybercrime cases, the biggest mistake is letting the government define the loss amount without challenge. The CFAA and §2B1.1 provide multiple methodologies, and the government will naturally choose the one that produces the highest figure. You need a technology expert and a forensic accountant to develop an alternative calculation.

In post-conviction cases, the most common error is procedural – filing after the limitations period, failing to exhaust remedies, or raising claims that could have been raised on direct appeal. These procedural defaults can be fatal to meritorious claims. At our law firm, we handle the procedural requirements with the same attention to detail as the substantive arguments.

Why You Need the Right Federal Defense Attorney

These cases require subject-matter expertise that goes beyond general federal defense. You need an attorney who understands the technology in cybercrime cases, the procedural requirements in post-conviction matters, and the BOP’s internal processes for sentence computation issues. Generalists miss things that specialists catch – and in federal court, missing something can cost years.

At Federal Lawyers, we have the specialized expertise to handle these cases at the highest level. Our attorneys stay current on developments in cybercrime law, post-conviction litigation, and BOP policy. If you’re facing one of these issues, we can help – and the first consultation is free.

Get Help Now – Risk Free Consultation

If you’re dealing with a situation involving cryptocurrency theft, you need an attorney who gets it – and has experience handling these exact types of cases. At Federal Lawyers, our criminal defense attorneys have over 50 years of combined experience handling federal cases nationwide. We’ve handled some of the toughest cases in the country, and we’re not afraid to fight for the best possible outcome.

When you reach out to our law firm, the process begins with a risk-free consultation. You can ask us anything, regardless of how long it takes. We are available 24/7 to help you. Call us at (212) 300-5196 – your first consultation is free, and completely confidential.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on the United States Sentencing Guidelines. It does not constitute legal advice. Federal sentencing involves many factors not captured here – including judicial discretion, cooperation agreements, and individual case circumstances. Always consult with a qualified federal criminal defense attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

How are cryptocurrency theft cases prosecuted and what statutes apply?

Cryptocurrency theft is prosecuted under: §1343 (wire fraud—the most common charge, up to 20 years), §1030 (CFAA for unauthorized computer access, up to 10-20 years), §1028A (aggravated identity theft if credentials were used, mandatory 2-year consecutive), and §1956-1957 (money laundering of stolen cryptocurrency, up to 20 years). Exchange hacks may also trigger §1030(a)(5) (intentional damage). USSG §2B1.1 applies with loss calculated at the cryptocurrency's fair market value at the time of theft. Blockchain analytics firms (Chainalysis, Elliptic, TRM Labs) can trace stolen funds through mixing services, cross-chain bridges, and decentralized exchanges. Defense counsel should challenge valuation methodology (cryptocurrency volatility creates significant timing disputes), the sufficiency of blockchain attribution evidence, and whether the defendant's access was truly "unauthorized" versus permitted under the platform's terms.

What role does blockchain analysis play in cryptocurrency theft investigations and trials?

Blockchain analysis tools trace transaction flows across public blockchains, identifying wallet clusters, exchange deposit addresses, and mixing/tumbling patterns. In United States v. Gratkowski (5th Cir. 2020), the court held that Bitcoin blockchain data has no Fourth Amendment protection because transactions are publicly broadcast. However, matching blockchain addresses to real-world identities typically requires exchange KYC records (obtained via subpoena or warrant) or IP address correlation. Defense counsel should challenge blockchain analysis under Daubert—questioning the expert's methodology, error rates, and the assumptions underlying wallet clustering algorithms. The gap between blockchain transaction tracing and individual attribution remains the prosecution's primary vulnerability, particularly when mixing services, privacy coins (Monero), or cross-chain bridges were used.