Key Highlights
- Do Kwon requests a U.S. judge cap his prison sentence at five years for his role in the 2022 TerraUSD collapse.
- His lawyers argue that nearly three years in harsh Montenegrin detention and financial penalties are already severe punishment.
- In August 2025, Kwon pleaded guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud, avoiding trial on seven other charges.
Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon is asking a U.S. judge to cap his prison sentence at five years for his role in the 2022 collapse of the Terra ecosystem, which wiped out roughly $40 billion in value and shook global crypto markets.
According to Bloomberg, Kwon’s filing argues that he has already faced significant punishment, pointing to nearly three years spent in detention, much of it under what his lawyers described as “brutal conditions” in Montenegro before he was extradited to the United States.
His legal team said these hardships, along with the financial penalties he has already accepted, mean that a longer sentence would be “far greater than necessary.”
A changing defense: From denial to guilty plea
Kwon’s legal troubles have unfolded in stages. In January, he appeared in a Manhattan courtroom and pleaded not guilty to multiple U.S. fraud and market-manipulation charges linked to the Terra crash, consenting to detention without bail.
The case shifted months later. In August 2025, Kwon pleaded guilty in a New York federal court to wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud. He admitted that he misled investors about the stability of TerraUSD.
The plea deal allowed him to avoid trial on seven other charges, including securities fraud and money laundering. He agreed to pay $19 million in penalties and forfeit several properties. Under the agreement, prosecutors said they would not seek more than a 12-year sentence, even though the statutory maximum could reach 25 years.
What comes next
Despite seeking a lighter sentence in the U.S., Kwon faces a much greater threat abroad. South Korean prosecutors are pursuing their own case tied to the Terra collapse and are seeking up to 40 years in prison. Once the U.S. sentencing is completed, South Korea is expected to request his transfer.
Kwon is set to be sentenced in Manhattan on December 11, 2025, after federal prosecutors submit their recommendation. The outcome will determine how long he remains in U.S. custody before facing additional proceedings in South Korea.
Kwon’s downfall mirrors the broader reckoning facing the crypto industry after a series of high-profile failures. Former FTX chief Sam Bankman-Fried, who was sentenced to 25 years in prison earlier this year, recently returned to court to appeal his conviction.
His lawyers argue that he did not receive a fair trial and that the jury was not shown evidence suggesting FTX may have been solvent.
As Kwon waits for his sentencing, his case is one of the most important in the crypto world after the crash. It is influencing how courts might deal with future large-scale failures related to digital assets.
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