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Back in May last year, two young brothers in their twenties got arrested in Manhattan, accused by the Justice Department of pulling off a massive $25 million attack on the Ethereum blockchain. The story sounds like some kind of high-tech heist straight outta sci-fi, but the brothers claimed they were just hardcore traders, not criminals. The prosecution argued that Anton and James Pepaire-Bueno set a trap amounting to fraud by exploiting crypto trading bots, which were moving digital money for a few entities—though only one alleged victim, David Yakira, actually stepped forward. The bots were performing something called “sandwich transactions,” a tactic where transactions are ordered to manipulate prices. Prosecutors claimed the brothers tricked these bots into glitching, forcing them to swap valuable tokens for basically worthless coins, then tried to launder the profits.
This scheme required some serious skill and a deep understanding of crypto’s Wild West landscape, where rules are still blurry. The brothers seemed to be trying to position themselves as some kinda Robin Hood figures, messing with bots known for parasitic behaviors. While sandwich transactions themselves are legal, they're often seen as predatory, gaming the system to make easy money off other traders without any real recourse for the victims. Basically, it looks like the brothers spotted the exploit before anyone else, slipped in some dodgy code, and walked away with millions.
Were these guys just savvy traders or outright grifters? That question was left hanging in the air during a three-week trial in Manhattan. The jury, made up mostly of middle-aged to retirement-aged folks—half of whom had master's degrees—was tasked with untangling these complex technical and ethical knots. But in the end, the jury couldn’t unanimously agree on a verdict. In fact, the stress of trying to reach a decision was so intense that, according to an anonymous juror, some of them lost multiple nights of sleep. On the final day, the jury sent a note to the judge explaining that the emotional toll was too much, and that half of them had even broken down crying during deliberations.
U.S. District Judge Jessica Clarke then declared a mistrial, acknowledging the deadlock. This doesn’t mean the brothers walk free just yet, but it’s certainly a setback for prosecutors who are likely to retry the case. The mistrial underscores how tough it is to prosecute cases with such nuanced and technical details, especially when the jury is under immense emotional pressure. For everyone involved, it was clearly a draining ordeal, highlighting the challenges courts face when dealing with the rapidly evolving and often confusing world of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.