United States v. Harmon ( 2021 )


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  •                                  UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    Criminal Case No. 19-cr-395 (BAH)
    LARRY DEAN HARMON,
    Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell
    Defendant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    For the third time, defendant Larry Dean Harmon moves to dismiss certain parts of the
    three-count indictment charging him with, inter alia, violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (a), see
    Indictment ¶ 18, ECF No. 1, by operating a money transmitting business without an appropriate
    money transmitting license in the District of Columbia (“state licensing” prong), under
    §1960(b)(1)(A), and failing to comply with the money transmitting business registration
    requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”), 
    31 U.S.C. § 5330
    , (“federal licensing” prong),
    under §1960(b)(1)(B), see Indictment ¶¶ 17–18(a) and (b) (Count Two), and by engaging,
    without a license, in the business of money transmission, as defined in 
    D.C. Code § 26-1001
    (10),
    in violation of the District of Columbia’s Money Transmitters Act (MTA), 
    D.C. Code § 26
    -
    1023(c), see Indictment ¶¶ 19–20 (Count Three). 1 After denial of defendant’s prior motions to
    dismiss these challenged charges for failure to state a claim and for due process concerns of lack
    of fair notice and running afoul of the rule of lenity, see United States v. Harmon (“Harmon I”),
    1
    To be clear, defendant has not challenged in this or his prior motions, the charges, in Count One, of
    conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    (h), Indictment, ¶¶ 14–16; or the
    “illegal funds” prong of Count Two, alleging that he engaged in “the transportation and transmission of funds
    known to [defendant] to have been derived from a criminal offense and intended to be used to promote and support
    unlawful activity,” as defined under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(C), in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (a), Indictment, ¶
    18(c).
    1
    
    474 F. Supp. 3d 76
     (D.D.C. 2020); United States v. Harmon (“Harmon II”), Criminal Action No.
    19-395 (BAH), 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     (D.D.C. Dec. 24, 2020), this time around,
    defendant argues dismissal is warranted, pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(b),
    because the criminal statutes, as applied here, are void for vagueness, see Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss
    Portions of Count Two and Count Three as Void for Vagueness (“Def.’s Mem.”) at 1, ECF No.
    83; see FED. R. CRIM. P. 12(b)(3)(B). For the reasons explained below, defendant’s motion to
    dismiss is denied.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Familiarity with the background to this case, as detailed in Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at
    80–85 and Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *3–9, is assumed and will not be
    repeated here, except briefly.
    A.      Factual Background
    Defendant is charged with conspiring to launder monetary instruments, unlawfully
    transmitting funds derived from, and intended to further, criminal offenses, and operating an
    unlicensed money transmitting business, see generally Indictment, based upon his alleged
    operation of the online service Helix between 2014 and 2017 as a “bitcoin tumbler,” meaning
    that customers’ bitcoin sent to Helix were “tumbled” by stripping them of identifying
    information, “enabl[ing] customers . . . to send bitcoins to designated recipients in a manner
    which was designed to conceal and obfuscate the source or owner of the bitcoins,” 
    id.
     ¶¶ 3–4.
    The service was “advertised . . . as a way to conceal transactions from law enforcement,” 
    id. ¶ 5
    ,
    especially for transactions via the Darknet market AlphaBay, which offered customers the
    opportunity “to purchase a variety of illegal drugs, guns, and other illegal goods,” 
    id. ¶ 6
    . Helix
    was used to “exchange[] . . . approximately 354,468 bitcoins—the equivalent of approximately
    $311 million in U.S. dollars.” 
    Id. ¶ 8
    .
    2
    Defendant initially moved to dismiss the federal and state licensing prongs of Count Two
    and the entirety of the MTA violation charged in Count Three of the Indictment for failure to
    state a claim on the grounds that “bitcoin is not money” and “Helix, as a bitcoin tumbler, was not
    a money transmitting business under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    .” Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 87
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). After close examination of the ordinary meaning
    of the term “money” and the statutory history and construction of the MTA, this Court held that
    “bitcoin qualifies as money under the MTA,” id. at 87, 90, and that “Helix was in the business of
    money transmission for purposes of the MTA,” id. at 87. Consequently, defendant’s motion to
    dismiss the state licensing prong of Count Two, under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(A) (prohibiting
    failure to comply with the District’s money transmitter requirements), and the MTA violation
    charged in Count Three, was denied. 
    Id.
     at 99–100. Further, finding that Helix’s business “was
    receiving bitcoin to send to another location or person in order to mask the original source of the
    bitcoin,” 
    id. at 88
    , this Court also held that the Helix business model “qualifies as money
    transmission,” under the BSA, 
    31 U.S.C. § 5330
    , warranting denial of defendant’s motion to
    dismiss the federal licensing prong of Count Two under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B) (prohibiting
    failure to comply with BSA’s money transmitting business registration requirements), Harmon I,
    474 F. Supp. 3d at 88. As the Court explained, “Helix, as described in the indictment, satisfies
    the definition of ‘unlicensed money transmitting business’ at § 1960(b)(1)(B) because Helix’s
    core business was receiving customers’ bitcoin and transmitting that bitcoin to another location
    or person.” Id. at 100–01.
    As relevant here, Harmon I further held, in response to defendant’s invocation of the
    principle that “any ‘ambiguity concerning the ambit of criminal statutes should be resolved in
    favor of lenity,’” id. at 98 (quoting Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss Counts Two and Three for Failure to
    3
    State an Offense and Mem. P. & A. Supp. (“Def.’s First MTD Mem.”) at 4, ECF No. 31 (quoting
    Skilling v. United States, 
    561 U.S. 358
    , 410 (2010))), that the rule of lenity does not apply to the
    MTA because “[t]hat rule is triggered only when ‘a reasonable doubt persists about a statute’s
    intended scope even after resort to ‘the language and structure, legislative history, and
    motivating policies’ of the statute,” 
    id.
     (quoting Moskal v. United States, 
    498 U.S. 103
    , 108
    (1990) (emphasis in original) (quoting Bifulco v. United States, 
    447 U.S. 381
    , 387 (1980))).
    Finding that the “text, structure, history, and purpose of the MTA show[s] that the MTA adopts
    the ordinary definition of money,” and that such definition “encompasses bitcoin,’” id. at 99,
    Harmon I determined that “the MTA [is not] ambiguous enough to trigger the rule of lenity,” id.
    (citing United States v. Burwell, 
    690 F.3d 500
    , 515 (D.C. Cir. 2012)).
    Six weeks after the denial of defendant’s motion to dismiss in Harmon I, the government
    provided notice of an exhibit to a post-conviction Petition for Writ of Error Coram Nobis filed in
    another case, United States v. e-Gold Ltd., Criminal Action No. 07-cr-00109 (ABJ). See Gov’t’s
    Notice of Suppl. Authority (“Gov’t’s Not.”), ECF No. 62. This exhibit was a “heretofore non-
    public letter,” 
    id. ¶ 1
    , dated June 23, 2016, from the District of Columbia Department of
    Insurance, Securities and Banking (“DISB”) to the CEO of a company called COEPTIS,
    responding to the company’s inquiry in October 2015 about whether it “need[ed] to obtain a
    money transmitter license in D.C.” for its “privately issued currency,” Gov’t’s Not., Attach.,
    Letter from Charlotte W. Parker, Assistant General Counsel, DISB, to William A. Cunningham,
    Chief Exec. Officer, COEPTIS (Jun. 23, 2016) (“DISB Letter”), at 1–2, ECF No. 62-1. The
    DISB Letter advised that COEPTIS need not acquire a money transmitter license, 
    id. at 2
    , based
    on the description of its operations “in Exhibit A,” 
    id. at 1
    , as “a closed/centralized settlement
    platform . . . to make internet payments,” in which “[n]ational currency will not be received,
    4
    dispensed, or used . . . [and] COEPTIS will not provide for any conversion of [privately issued
    currency], to national currency . . . ,” 
    id.
     2 This conclusion was further “[b]ased on” the legal
    conclusions contained in Exhibits B and C to the DISB Letter that were provided as part of the
    government’s Notice. 3
    In response to the government’s disclosure of the DISB Letter, defendant moved for
    reconsideration of the ruling that “bitcoin is money pursuant to the MTA,” Def.’s Mot. for
    Reconsideration at 2, ECF No. 63, arguing, inter alia, that the rule of lenity and due process right
    to fair notice required reconsideration, see Def.’s Reply Supp. Mot. Reconsideration (“Def.’s
    Mot. Reconsideration Reply”) at 3–6, ECF No. 74. This second effort to dismiss parts of the
    indictment was no more successful than the first. As explained in Harmon II, the DISB Letter
    was both unpersuasive and entitled to no deference because it was not intended to have the force
    of law, Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *15–39, and therefore warranted no
    modification of the Harmon I determination that bitcoin is money for the purposes of the MTA,
    
    id. at *14
    . Moreover, Harmon II rejected defendant’s due process argument both because the
    MTA is not “ambiguous enough to trigger the rule of lenity,” 
    id.
     at *39–40, and because the
    DISB Letter failed to show Harmon I was a “retroactive decision that deprived defendant of due
    process,” 
    id.
     at *41–42.
    2
    The DISB Letter’s “Exhibit A,” which provides details as to the COEPTIS business operation and was the
    basis for DISB’s opinion that COEPTIS did not need to obtain an MTA license, is not part of the government’s
    Notice and has not been disclosed in this case.
    3
    Citations to the DISB Letter’s Exhibits B and C use the pagination automatically assigned by the Court’s
    Case Management/Electronic Filing (CM/ECF) system. Exhibit B is an internal DISB memorandum, dated January
    16, 2015, from DISB’s Associate Commissioner for Banking, through a DISB Assistant General Counsel, to DISB’s
    Acting Commissioner, regarding “Regulatory Treatment of the Sale or Exchange of Decentralized Virtual Currency
    under the Federal Bank Secrecy Act and the District of Columbia Money Transmitters Act of 2000” (“DISB
    Opinion Memo”). DISB Letter, Ex. B, at 3–7, ECF No. 62-1. Exhibit C is an intra-agency email, dated June 2,
    2016, from a DISB Licensing Manager to DISB’s Assistant General Counsel (“DISB Email”), which concluded that
    the company “‘is engaged in a two party business model that does not involve the transfer of ‘money’ or a ‘medium
    of exchange authorized or adopted by a government as part of its currency,’” DISB Letter at 2 (quoting DISB Email,
    at 8, ECF No. 62-1).
    5
    Defendant has now moved, again, to dismiss the federal and state licensing prongs of
    Count Two and the MTA violation charged in Count Three of the indictment on the related due
    process grounds that, as applied here, the criminal statutes are void-for-vagueness.
    II.    LEGAL STANDARD
    A criminal defendant “may raise by pretrial motion any defense, objection, or request that
    the court can determine without a trial on the merits.” FED. R. CRIM. P. 12(b)(1). Such pretrial
    motion may challenge “a defect in the indictment or information” if “the basis for the motion is
    then reasonably available and the motion can be determined without a trial on the merits.” FED.
    R. CRIM. P. 12(b)(3)(B). Although a court’s supervisory powers provide the authority
    to dismiss an indictment, “dismissal is granted only in unusual circumstances.” United States v.
    Ballestas, 
    795 F.3d 138
    , 148 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
    III.   DISCUSSION
    Defendant argues that the federal and state licensing prongs of Count Two and the MTA
    violation charged in Count Three of the indictment are impermissibly vague as-applied because
    “the law . . . [defendant] now stands accused of breaking failed to provide him fair warning of
    the conduct the government insists they proscribe.” Def.’s Mem. at 1. According to defendant,
    “the federal and District of Columbia statutes in question were so vague that individuals of
    common intelligence would have to guess as to whether their conduct was proscribed” during the
    time defendant operated Grams and Helix between 2014 and 2017. Def.’s Mem. at 1–2; Def.’s
    Corrected Reply Gov’t’s Opp’n Def.’s Mot. Dismiss Portions of Count Two and Count Three as
    Void for Vagueness (“Def.’s Reply”) at 3, 4, ECF No. 91 (asserting defendant “was not on
    sufficient notice that the act of ‘tumbling’ bitcoin could violate” the MTA or BSA). The
    government disagrees, explaining that neither the BSA nor the MTA are vague, in light of
    6
    binding D.C. Circuit precedent and prior findings by this Court. Gov’t’s Opp’n Def.’s Mot.
    Dismiss Portions of Count Two and Count Three as Void for Vaguenses (“Gov’t’s Opp’n”) at 1,
    ECF No. 87. The government is correct and, again for the third time, defendant’s motion to
    dismiss parts of the indictment is denied.
    A.      Vagueness Standard Generally
    A criminal statute is unconstitutionally vague if it “fails to give ordinary people fair
    notice of the conduct it punishes, or [is] so standardless that it invites arbitrary enforcement.”
    United States v. Bronstein, 
    849 F.3d 1101
    , 1106 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Johnson v. United States, 
    576 U.S. 591
    , 595 (2015)); see also Nat’l Ass’n of Mfrs. v. Taylor, 
    582 F.3d 1
    , 23 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (noting that criminal statute must “‘provide adequate notice to a
    person of ordinary intelligence that his contemplated conduct is illegal.’” (quoting Buckley v.
    Valeo, 
    424 U.S. 1
    , 77 (1976))). “[T]he touchstone is whether the statute, either standing alone or
    as construed, made it reasonably clear at the relevant time that the defendant’s conduct was
    criminal.” United States v. Lanier, 
    520 U.S. 259
    , 267 (1997).
    This is a stringent standard. Thus, a void-for-vagueness challenge is unavailing when
    posed to a statute that merely “‘requires a person to conform his conduct to an imprecise but
    comprehensible normative standard,’ whose satisfaction may vary depending upon whom you
    ask.” Bronstein, 849 F.3d at 1107 (quoting Coates v. Cincinnati, 
    402 U.S. 611
    , 614 (1971)).
    Instead, unconstitutional vagueness arises only if the statute “specifies no standard of conduct at
    all.” 
    Id.
     (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Coates, 
    402 U.S. at
    614 and
    citing Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 
    455 U.S. 489
    , 495 n.7
    (1982)). “[A] statute’s vagueness is either susceptible to judicial construction or is void for
    vagueness based on the application of traditional rules of statutory interpretation.” 
    Id.
     at 1106
    (citing Bouie v. Columbia, 
    378 U.S. 347
    , 355 n.5 (1964)). Thus, “the question is whether the
    7
    term provides a discernible standard when legally construed,” 
    id.
     at 1107 (citing Coates, 
    402 U.S. at 612
    ), such that a statute is impermissibly vague “[o]nly if no construction can save the
    Act from the claim of unconstitutionality,” 
    id.
     (quoting Screws v. United States, 
    325 U.S. 91
    , 100
    (1945)).
    Vagueness challenges are either facial or as-applied. “[T]he distinction between facial
    and as-applied challenges . . . goes to the breadth of the remedy employed by the Court, not what
    must be pleaded in a complaint.” Edwards v. District of Columbia, 
    755 F.3d 996
    , 1001 (D.C.
    Cir. 2014) (quoting Citizens United v. FEC, 
    588 U.S. 310
    , 331 (2010)); cf. Gross v. United
    States, 
    771 F.3d 10
    , 15 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (finding the distinction between facial and as-applied
    immaterial in addressing an Equal Protection Clause challenge to the 
    28 U.S.C. § 2680
     foreign
    country exception to the waiver of sovereign immunity from tort claims under of the Federal
    Tort Claims Act). “The substantive rule of law,” however, “is the same for both challenges.” 
    Id.
    at 1001 (citing Legal Aid Servs. of Or. v. Legal Servs. Corp., 
    608 F.3d 1084
    , 1096 (9th Cir.
    2010)).
    B.   BSA and MTA Are Not Vague Statutes As Applied to Alleged Offense
    Conduct
    Defendant challenges as unconstitutionally vague the federal and state licensing prongs
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1), and 
    D.C. Code § 26-1023
    (c), as applied to his alleged conduct,
    asserting that he “was under no notice that either [the MTA or the BSA] would apply to a
    bitcoin-to-bitcoin swap that occurred solely on the global bitcoin ledger and which involved no
    national currency or fiat.” Def.’s Reply at 1. 4           In support, defendant cites “[t]he Constitution’s
    4
    Defendant takes issue with the government’s characterization of his vagueness challenge as seeking a
    “sweeping constitutional ruling,” Gov’t’s Opp’n at 1, but his clarification that he seeks only “to declare the
    application of these particular portions of the MTA and the BSA unconstitutional as applied to [defendant’s] alleged
    conduct,” Def.’s Reply at 2, does little to address the government’s concern since “the substantive rule of law is the
    same for both [facial and as-applied] challenges,” Edwards, 755 F.3d at 1001 (citing Legal Servs. Corp., 
    608 F.3d at 1096
    ).
    8
    requirement of ‘fair warning,’” which protects against “a statute [] void for vagueness,” and
    claims that the statutes as applied here “‘forbids or requires the doing of [acts] in terms so vague
    that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at [their] meaning and differ as to
    [their] application,’” Def.’s Mem. at 3 (quoting Lanier, 
    520 U.S. at 266
    ); see also United States
    v. e-Gold, Ltd., 
    550 F. Supp. 2d 82
    , 98 (D.D.C. 2008).
    At the outset, as the government notes, defendant does not point to any specific language
    in the BSA and MTA as vague, see Gov’t’s Mem. at 1, contending instead that he need not
    “identify specific words in a statute whose meaning, in isolation, is unknown” because
    “[n]owhere has this Court, the D.C. Circuit, or the Supreme Court” so required, Def.’s Reply at
    2. Given this broad, non-specific challenge, defendant’s vagueness challenge is reviewed as
    pertaining to the statutory language as a whole. Set against the standard for vagueness, however,
    defendant fails to show the relevant sections of the BSA and MTA either failed to give fair
    notice or are so “standardless” as to invite “arbitrary enforcement.” Bronstein, 849 F.3d at
    1106. 5
    5
    The government characterizes defendant’s focus as “solely on the ‘notice’ prong of the vagueness
    doctrine,” Gov’t’s Opp’n at 2 n.1, and, in fact, defendant makes only cursory reference to enforcement discretion,
    see Def.’s Mem. at 4 (positing, without further discussion on this point, that MTA and BSA are void-for-vagueness
    by failing to “guard[] against arbitrary or discriminatory law enforcement” (quoting Sessions v. Dimaya, 
    138 S. Ct. 1204
    , 1212 (2018)); Def.’s Reply at 3 (asserting, briefly, that the MTA and BSA “fail to set reasonably clear
    guidelines for law enforcement officials and triers of fact”). Certainly, “[l]aws that ‘regulate persons or entities,’ . . .
    must be sufficiently clear ‘that those enforcing the law do not act in an arbitrary or discriminatory way.” Beckles v.
    United States, 
    137 S. Ct. 886
    , 894 (2017) (quoting FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 
    567 U.S. 239
    , 253 (2012));
    see also Kolender v. Lawson, 
    461 U.S. 352
    , 358 (1983) (stating “the more important aspect of the vagueness
    doctrine is not actual notice, but the other principal element of the doctrine -- the requirement that a legislature
    establish minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement.” (internal quotations and citation omitted)). To evaluate a
    vagueness claim stemming from arbitrary enforcement, courts ask whether the challenged statute “establish[es]
    minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement,” Kolender, 
    461 U.S. at 358
    , since a law may “require law
    enforcement officers to use their discretion without being unconstitutionally vague,” Agnew v. Gov’t of the Dist. of
    Columbia, 
    920 F.3d 49
    , 55 (D.C. Cir. 2019). At the same time, context matters. As the Supreme Court has
    explained, economic regulation, for example, “is subject to a less strict vagueness test because its subject matter is
    often more narrow, and because businesses, which face economic demands to plan behavior carefully, can be
    expected to consult relevant legislation in advance of action . . . [and] may have the ability to clarify the meaning of
    the regulation by its own inquiry, or by resort to an administrative process.” Village of Hoffman Estates, 
    455 U.S. at 498
    ; see also Copeland v. Vance, 
    893 F.3d 101
    , 114 (2d Cir. 2018) (applying “only a moderately stringent
    vagueness test” where criminal statute was not claimed to inhibit the exercise of constitutional rights); CMR D.N.
    9
    1.        MTA Is Not Unconstitutionally Vague
    Defendant’s vagueness challenge to the state licensing prong in Count Two and Count
    Three, both of which are predicated on violations of the MTA, fails to demonstrate a lack of fair
    notice. This challenge simply reploughs ground already covered, by posing two arguments fully
    addressed and rejected in Harmon I and Harmon II: first, that “there was no guidance” indicating
    that “bitcoin is money for purposes of the statute . . . during the alleged behavior,” Def.’s Mem at
    5, and, second, that the existence of the DISB Letter signifies a “disagreement between [] DISB
    and this Court [that] is evidence of the vagueness of the MTA,” 
    id.
    As to defendant’s first argument, the statutory language gave defendant, a “person of
    ordinary intelligence,” a “reasonable opportunity to know” that bitcoin tumbling was prohibited.
    See Grayned v. City of Rockford, 
    408 U.S. 104
    , 108 (1972). The relevant statutory language
    makes it a crime to “engage[] in the business of money transmission without a license” as
    provided in the MTA, 
    D.C. Code § 26-1023
    (c), where “money transmission” is defined as “the
    sale or issuance of payment instruments or engaging in the business of receiving money for
    transmission or transmitting money within the United States, or to locations abroad, by any and
    all means, including but not limited to payment instrument, wire, facsimile, or electronic
    transfer,” 
    id.
     § 26-1001(10).
    Corp. & Marina Towers Ltd. v. City of Phila., 
    703 F.3d 612
    , 631 (3d Cir. 2013) (rejecting developer’s vagueness
    challenge to city regulations, noting that “[i]f a developer of reasonable intelligence faces a close call after analyzing
    the constructions in the district, it can apply for a permit to eliminate any remaining ambiguity. This is sufficient to
    comply with constitutional requirements.”). A scienter requirement may also “mitigate a law’s vagueness,” Village
    of Hoffman Estates, 
    455 U.S. at 499
    , though a “more exacting” “standard of certainty” is imposed for criminal
    statutes than in noncriminal statutes, Barenblatt v. United States, 
    360 U.S. 109
    , 137 (1959). By contrast to the
    company inquiry that prompted the DISB Letter, defendant did not avail himself of any administrative process to
    assess the legality of his conduct under the MTA or BSA, each of which statute includes a scienter requirement and
    neither of which statute defendant here challenges as otherwise inhibiting his exercise of his constitutionally
    protected rights. In any event, as discussed in the text, both the MTA and BSA meet the constitutionally required
    minimal threshold of providing standards without “vest[ing] virtually complete discretion in the hands of [law
    enforcement] to determine whether the suspect has satisfied the statute.” Kolender, 
    461 U.S. at 358
    .
    10
    Harmon I gave “judicial construction” to the term “money” using “traditional rules for
    statutory interpretation,” Bronstein, 849 F.3d at 1106, exhaustively showing “bitcoin” falls under
    the ordinary meaning of the word “money,” Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 88–95. Indeed,
    “[m]oney, in common parlance, is a medium exchange,” a “token that can be traded for goods or
    services,” id. at 88 (citing Money, AM. HERITAGE DICTIONARY (4th ed. 2000), Money, OXFORD
    ENGLISH DICTIONARY (3d ed. 2002), and Money, MERRIAM-WEBSTER ONLINE,
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/money)), or a “store of value,” id. at 88–89 (citing
    Money, OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (3d ed. 2002)). Based on these definitions of “money,”
    multiple technical authorities describing how bitcoin works and how it is used, id. at 89–90,
    confirmed by holdings of other federal courts that determined “bitcoin qualifies as money under .
    . . ordinary definitions,” id. at 90, Harmon I concluded that “[b]itcoin is . . . a medium of
    exchange, method of payment, and store of value” that falls under the definition of money, id. at
    89.
    Moreover, Harmon I was able to use “a variety of [additional] tools for statutory
    interpretation and supportive sources beyond the statutory text,” Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *31–32, and rely on the statute’s “language, structure, and legislative history,”
    Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 98, to conclude that “the MTA adopts the ordinary definition of
    money,” which “encompasses bitcoin,” id. at 87. Defendant had ample opportunity to
    “familiarize [him]self with [the statute’s] terms and to comply” with the law—or even to seek
    DISB’s licensure review, as another company did—before allegedly operating Helix, see
    Bronstein, 849 F.3d at 1107 (quoting Texaco, Inc. v. Short, 
    454 U.S. 516
     (1982)), and his failure
    to do so does not render the statutory text vague. 6
    6
    The parties dispute whether this Court’s prior conclusion that the rule of lenity is inapplicable automatically
    forecloses defendant’s instant vagueness challenge to the MTA. Relying on the determinations that “[d]efendant’s
    11
    Defendant’s second argument that the DISB Letter shows “confusion [among] Courts,
    law enforcement and citizens” about whether bitcoin tumbling was “money transmitting,” Def.’s
    Mem. at 1; see also id. at 5 (claiming “attorneys for the District’s [DISB] believed during that
    time (and may still today) that bitcoin was not money pursuant to the MTA”); Def.’s Reply at 3
    (questioning fair notice “[i]f the very people in charge of enforcing the statute cannot agree on
    what it means”), is also foreclosed. Harmon II determined that this letter was limited in its
    application and wholly unpersuasive. Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *20–39.
    As an initial matter, the relevant inquiry in assessing fair notice for vagueness is not
    whether a local administrative agency exercised discretion in a particular manner or even
    whether every interpretation of the statute by a judicial or law enforcement officer applies the
    statute in exactly the same way. Rather, the focus must be on whether the statute “give[s]
    ordinary people fair notice of the conduct it punishes.” Bronstein, 849 F.3d at 1106. The MTA,
    which is “susceptible to judicial construction,” id., and “provides a discernible standard when
    legally construed,” id. at 1107, is thus not made vague by divergent interpretations issued by this
    arguments do not render the MTA ambiguous enough to trigger the rule of lenity,” Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 99
    (citing Burwell, 690 F.3d at 515), and that “[t]he rule of lenity, even in light of the DISB Letter, is not applicable
    ‘merely because it was possible to articulate’ the term ‘money’ ‘more narrow[ly],’” Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *40 (quoting Moskal, 
    498 U.S. at 108
    ), the government argues that “a statute . . . insufficiently
    ambiguous to trigger the Rule of Lenity” necessarily cannot be “so vague that it must be struck down as
    unconstitutional,” Gov’t’s Opp’n at 5–6 (citing United States v. Lanier, 
    520 U.S. 259
    , 266 (1997) (describing lenity
    as “a sort of ‘junior version of the vagueness doctrine.’”)). Defendant disagrees, without citation, asserting merely
    that “this Court’s previous ruling on the Rule of Lenity does not change the constitutionally compelled conclusion
    that the MTA is vague as applied,” Def.’s Reply at 3. While the government is correct that “[v]agueness and the
    Rule of Lenity are closely related,” Gov’t’s Mem. at 5, as two protections provided by the constitutional “fair
    warning” requirement, Lanier, 
    520 U.S. at 266
     (describing as “related manifestations of the fair warning
    requirement . . . the vagueness doctrine. . . [and] the canon of strict construction of criminal statutes, or rule of
    lenity”), they are not identical or coextensive doctrines and thus inapplicability of the rule of lenity may not
    necessarily foreclose a vagueness challenge, as the government suggests. This dispute need not be resolved,
    however, since analysis of whether the MTA is unconstitutionally vague as applied here reaches the same
    conclusion that defendant’s vagueness challenge does not merit dismissal of the challenged charges.
    12
    Court and a local agency, respectively, applying the statutory standard to different companies
    based on different records.
    In fact, the DISB Letter is hardly probative of “disagreement” between this Court and
    DISB, as the DISB Letter “is only an informal opinion about the status of a single company and
    does not purport to express broader principles about the application of the MTA.” Harmon II,
    
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
    , at *26. This “one-off decision in response to a company
    inquiry” is not an “expression of binding opinion generally applicable to all virtual currency
    operations in the District.” See 
    id. at *27
    . Set against the absence of any public guidance from
    DISB, beyond the statutory language, regarding the MTA’s coverage of bitcoin tumbling,
    between 2014 and 2017 or otherwise, and the “[f]ive virtual currency companies that have
    obtained money transmitter licenses from DISB” between 2015 and 2019, apparently aware “that
    the District’s MTA reaches virtual currency,” Harmon I, 47 F. Supp. 3d at 95–96, defendant’s
    argument that the DISB “attorneys [generally]. . . believed during that time . . . that bitcoin was
    not money pursuant to the MTA” is an overstatement, Def.’s Mem. at 5. Put simply, the DISB
    Letter is properly read as a limited determination as to a single company, rather than a definitive
    construction of the MTA intended for public guidance on the scope of that statute in the context
    of evolving new virtual currency services. 7 Moreover, it bears noting that the DISB Letter was
    generated in response to a company query, in 2015, whether a license was required for a virtual
    currency business without conversion of national currency, so the scope of coverage of the MTA
    7
    Even if the DISB Letter purported to reflect DISB’s attitude toward bitcoin tumbling at the time, no
    deference is warranted under Chevron to the local agency’s view “due to its lack of reasoned or even persuasive
    decisionmaking.” Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
    , at *30 (citing Pub. Citizen, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of
    Health & Human Servs., 
    332 F.3d 654
    , 661 (D.C. Cir. 2003)). Indeed, the DISB Letter is “based on superficial and
    faulty misapplication” of the references cited in the DISB Letter’s attached exhibits, id. at *32, misapplied relevant
    2013 Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) guidance, id. at *32–34, relied on only two, niche
    definitions of the term “money,” id. at *34–36, and omitted “any consideration of publicly available legal or agency
    precedent governing money transmitting in the District of Columbia,” id. at *36–38.
    13
    to this type of operation was sufficiently clear to others in the virtual currency business to seek
    administrative guidance on the need for licensure. 8
    Finally, defendant argues that the MTA is vague as-applied, “[f]rom prior to 2014 to the
    end of 2017,” noting that “the D.C. Council had [not] enacted legislation specifically governing
    the operation of a bitcoin tumbler,” Def.’s Mem. at 4, and there was “no statement from any
    branch of . . . district law that a bitcoin-to-bitcoin transaction would violate the law . . . [and] no
    prior indication to the public to this effect,” id. As the MTA itself demonstrates, however,
    legislation does not have to use the precise term “bitcoin tumbler” to cover that form of money
    transmission. Furthermore, defendant’s insistence on the presence of explicit reference to
    “bitcoin tumbler” in legislative or administrative guidance is not the measure of whether a statute
    is constitutionally void-for-vagueness. To the contrary, “perfect clarity and precise guidance
    have never been required even of regulations that restrict [protected] activity.” United States v.
    Class, 
    930 F.3d 460
    , 467 (D.C. Cir. 2019) (alteration in original) (quoting Ward v. Rock Against
    Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 794 (1989)). Instead, “flexibility and reasonable breadth” in the statutory
    text passes constitutional muster, Agnew, 920 F.3d at 55 (quoting Grayned, 
    408 U.S. at 110
    ),
    provided the statute provides “an imprecise but comprehensible normative standard,” Bronstein,
    849 F.3d at 1107 (quoting Coates, 
    402 U.S. at 614
    ). The MTA’s title, text and announced
    purpose make clear that the statute governs “money transmitting” broadly in the District of
    Columbia and is sufficiently clear for the ordinary person to recognize that a bitcoin-to-bitcoin
    tumbler, such as Helix, was subject to regulation. See Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 100–01.
    8
    Another indication of the limited determination in the DISB Letter is the fact that DISB’s decision not to
    require a money transmitter license for COEPTIS was based on the specific record before the agency and was
    subject to close monitoring, such that any “change, including any change in ownership or name,” was required to be
    submitted to the agency “for review and analysis.” DISB Letter at 2.
    14
    Accordingly, any lack of specific legislative or administrative guidance as to the precise alleged
    conduct at issue here is not probative of vagueness in this case.
    2.      BSA Is Not Unconstitutionally Vague
    Defendant’s vagueness challenge to the federal licensing prong of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)
    amounts to a rehash of his arguments rejected in Harmon I. In his original dismissal motion,
    defendant urged that “Helix . . . was not an ‘unlicensed money transmitting business’ under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B) ‘because the Indictment fails to allege that Helix did anything other than
    provide bitcoin back to the user to whom it was sent.’” Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 100
    (quoting Def.’s Reply Supp. Mot. to Dismiss Counts Two and Three for Failure to State and
    Offense (“Def.’s First MTD Reply”) at 2, ECF No. 49). Harmon I found otherwise, determining
    that Helix was, indeed, an “unlicensed money transmitting business” under the BSA because
    “Helix’s core business was receiving customers’ bitcoin and transmitting that bitcoin to another
    location or person.” Id. at 100–01. Here, again, defendant urges that he had “insufficient notice
    . . . that his conduct would invoke the BSA” because it was not clear that “bitcoin-to-bitcoin
    swap[ping] occurring solely on the internet based global ledger would constitute money
    transmission or operating a money transmitting business” under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (a). Def.’s
    Reply at 4.
    Based on close review of the statutory and regulatory language, including relevant
    definitions, used in the federal licensing prong of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B), Harmon I, 474 F.
    Supp. 3d at 101–03, combined with a detailed examination of how Helix transactions were
    accomplished, id. at 103–05, Harmon I concluded that defendant operated a business that
    “receiv[ed] customers’ bitcoins and transmitt[ed those] bitcoin[s] to another location or person,”
    id. at 100–01, thereby “satisf[ying] the definition of ‘unlicensed money transmitting business’ at
    § 1960(b)(1)(B),” id. at 109. This extensive analysis, which will not be repeated here,
    15
    establishes that this statutory provision sets out a complex, but “comprehensible normative
    standard” for criminal behavior, Coates, 
    402 U.S. at 614
    , affording “adequate notice to a person
    of ordinary intelligence” that defendant’s conduct was proscribed, Taylor, 
    582 F.3d at 23
    (quoting Buckley, 
    424 U.S. at 77
    ).
    Without directly confronting the analysis in Harmon I, defendant nonetheless raises three
    arguments to challenge 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B) as impermissibly vague as applied to his
    operation of Helix, but none of these arguments is persuasive. First, as with the state licensing
    prong, under §1960(b)(1)(A), defendant cites the lack of specific guidance from federal
    authorities about the scope of the federal licensing prong of §1960(b)(1)(B). According to
    defendant, “[i]t was not until 2019 that . . . FinCEN[] gave any guidance regarding whether a
    tumbler was a money transmitter subject to [the Treasury Department’s] regulation.” Def.’s
    Mem. at 5 (citing U.S. DEP’T OF THE TREASURY, FINCEN, FIN-2019-G001, APPLICATION OF
    FINCEN’S REGULATIONS TO CERTAIN BUSINESS MODELS INVOLVING CONVERTIBLE VIRTUAL
    CURRENCIES (May 9, 2019) (“2019 FinCEN Guidance”)). Given the purported “overlapping
    regulation and confusion between the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Internal
    Revenue Service, the Securities and Exchange Commission and other government entities on
    how to classify and regulate” bitcoin tumblers, defendant contends that “regulations regarding
    bitcoin tumbling qualifying as money transmitting business[es] could not have been sufficiently
    clear between 2014 and 2017.” Id. at 5. Defendant makes little effort to back up his observation
    about divergent conclusions about bitcoin-to-bitcoin transfers among different federal agencies,
    but given markedly different missions, responsibilities and expertise of different agencies, even
    if that observation were correct, it would not be probative of whether the MTA is vague as-
    applied to defendant. More importantly, even if the 2019 FinCEN Guidance were the first
    16
    guidance issued by the agency referring expressly to bitcoin tumbling, regulatory updates and
    clarifications are not proof of statutory vagueness. See Class, 930 F.3d at 467.
    In any event, this argument fails to acknowledge earlier FinCEN guidance that was
    sufficiently broad to cover bitcoin tumbling operations like Helix. FinCEN issued regulatory
    guidance for virtual currencies as early as 2013, before defendant began operating Helix. See
    U.S. DEP’T OF THE TREASURY, FINCEN, FIN-2013-G001, APPLICATION OF FINCEN’S
    REGULATIONS TO PERSONS ADMINISTERING, EXCHANGING, OR USING VIRTUAL CURRENCIES
    (“2013 FinCEN Guidance”) (Mar. 18, 2013). Harmon II, as the government points out,
    recognized that this guidance explicitly “declined to distinguish ‘between virtual currency and
    real currency,’ [and] deemed ‘transmitting anything of value that substitutes for currency’ to
    qualify as transmission under the BSA.” Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at *34
    (emphasis in original) (quoting 2013 FinCEN Guidance); see also Gov’t’s Opp’n at 10 n.7. As
    relevant here, this 2013 FinCEN Guidance also described a quintessential example of “money
    transmission” as “the transfer of value from a customer’s currency or commodity position to the
    account of another customer,” 2013 FinCEN Guidance, thereby establishing that “the definition
    of a money transmitter does not differentiate between real currencies and convertible
    currencies,” 
    id.
     Further, this guidance explains that “a person is an exchanger and a money
    transmitter if the person accepts . . . de-centralized convertible virtual currency from one person
    and transmits it to another person as part of the acceptance and transfer of currency, funds, or
    other value that substitutes for currency.” 
    Id.
     Consequently, this guidance squarely includes a
    bitcoin tumbler like Helix that “work[s] by literally mixing up a user’s payment with lots of other
    payments from other users,” Harmon I, 474 F. Supp. 3d at 82 (quoting Usha R. Rodrigues, Law
    and the Blockchain, 104 IOWA L. REV. 679, 712 n.224 (2019)), in order to provide customers
    17
    “with new bitcoins ‘which have never been to the darknet before,’” id. at 83 (quoting Indictment
    ¶ 5); see also id. at 103–09 (finding Helix, as described in the Indictment, moved money from
    one person or place to another). In short, the 2013 FinCEN Guidance belies defendant’s
    assertion that, prior to 2019, “no statement from any branch of federal [government],” Def.’s
    Mem. at 4, signaled that a “bitcoin-to-bitcoin transaction would violate” the BSA, id.
    Second, defendant complains that the “bitcoin industry and bitcoin enthusiast[s]” made
    “no indication that tumbling bitcoin could be a potentially illegal act.” Def.’s Reply at 4–5. As
    support, defendant cites various online articles that do not discuss, analyze or even mention the
    legality of bitcoin tumbling. See id. (citing Kevin Helms, US Treasury Unveils Stifling Crypto
    Wallet Regulation — Experts Break Down the Rules, BITCOIN NEWS (Dec. 19, 2020),
    https://news.bitcoin.com/us-treasury-cryptocurrency-wallet-regulation-experts-break-down-rules/
    (last accessed Apr. 16, 2021); Michael J. Casey, Privacy is Vital to Crypto – and the Global
    Economy, COINDESK (Jun. 27, 2018), https://www.coindesk.com/privacy-vital-crypto-global-
    economy (last accessed Apr. 16, 2021); Jamie Redman, Tumbling Bitcoins: A Guide Through the
    Rinse Cycle, BITCOIN NEWS (Jul. 21, 2016), https://news.bitcoin.com/tumbling-bitcoins-guide-
    rinse-cycle/ (last accessed Apr. 16, 2021). Aside from the fact that bitcoin industry “enthusiasts”
    are woefully unpersuasive as authorities on the legality of bitcoin tumbling operations, the
    handful of online articles defendant cites are largely irrelevant to the instant constitutional
    challenge to charges in the Indictment. For example, one article, published in December 2020,
    well after Helix shuttered, discusses new proposed rules announced by FinCEN that “aim[] at
    closing anti-money laundering regulatory gaps for certain . . . [CVC] and digital asset
    transactions,” and makes no mention of bitcoin-to-bitcoin transfers in the context of bitcoin
    tumblers. See Helms, supra. Another article, published in June 2018, also after Helix shut
    18
    down, mentions “bitcoin mixers” only in passing as part of an argument against bitcoin
    regulation for the sake of economic privacy for users. See Casey, supra. The only article
    defendant cites that was published while Helix was operational advises potential bitcoin tumbler
    users about how to access such services, see Redman, supra, but makes no representations about
    the legality of operating a bitcoin tumbler, other than cautioning that using “the Dark Net to visit
    marketplaces . . . puts . . . users at risk of jail time and criminal penalty,” see id. When weighed
    against legal analysis set out in Harmon I and II regarding 
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B) and
    relevant BSA provisions and administrative guidance, these layperson’s views fall far short of
    providing comprehensive, much less persuasive, authority about the regulatory landscape to
    support defendant’s constitutional challenge.
    Third, in response to the government’s argument that “numerous other courts . . . have
    similarly analyzed the BSA and concluded that it covers virtual currency,” Gov’t’s Opp’n at 12,
    defendant notes that the cases cited “had a national currency component” not present here, Def.’s
    Reply at 5. While defendant is correct that some of the pre-2017 cases the government cites
    concerned criminal conduct involving fiat currency, see United States v. Faiella, 
    39 F. Supp. 3d 544
    , 546 (S.D.N.Y. 2014) (finding defendant’s activities constituted “transmitting” money under
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1960
     in part because he “sold Bitcoin as a product in and of itself” in exchange for
    “cash deposits”); United States v. Budovsky, No. 13cr368 (DLC), 
    2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 127717
    at *3 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 23, 2015) (ruling against defendant on motion to dismiss indictment under
    Fed. R. Crim. P. 7(c)(1) and the Fifth Amendment where defendant’s company was alleged to
    have “processed an estimated 55 million separate financial transactions and laundered more than
    $6 billion in criminal proceeds”), defendant incorrectly supposes that the lack of a prior
    prosecution based on bitcoin tumbling supports a vagueness determination here. The fact that, as
    19
    the government concedes, “this is the first U.S. prosecution of a cryptocurrency mixer,” Gov’t’s
    Opp’n at 13, does not, standing alone, render a statutory application so novel as to be
    unconstitutional for vagueness. 9 “The void-for-vagueness doctrine is not designed to convert
    into a constitutional dilemma the practical difficulties in drawing criminal statutes both general
    enough to take into account a variety of human conduct and sufficiently specific to provide fair
    warning that certain kinds of conduct are prohibited.” United States v. Maude, 
    481 F.2d 1062
    ,
    1068 (D.C. Cir. 1973) (quoting Colten v. Kentucky, 
    407 U.S. 104
    , 110 (1972)); see also Lanier,
    
    520 U.S. at 271
     (noting that “a general constitutional rule already identified in the decisional law
    may apply with obvious clarity to the specific conduct in question, even though ‘the very action
    in question has [not] previously been held unlawful.” (quoting Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987))). Put simply, the fact that defendant is the first person to be prosecuted under 
    5 U.S.C. § 1960
    (b)(1)(B) for operating a bitcoin tumbler does not render provision vague.
    IV.      CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s motion to dismiss parts of Count Two and
    Count Three of the Indictment because the criminal statutes he is charged with violating, namely,
    
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1960
    (b)(1)(A) and (B) and 
    D.C. Code §26-1023
    (c), are impermissibly void-for-
    vagueness as applied to him, is denied.
    An Order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion will be filed contemporaneously.
    Date: April 16, 2021
    __________________________
    BERYL A. HOWELL
    Chief Judge
    9
    Defendant briefly asserts that “[t]his Court’s conclusion that bitcoin is money for the purpose of the MTA
    is a novel construction,” Def.’s Mem. at 6, seemingly invoking the ex post facto prohibition of the constitutional fair
    warning guarantee, but this argument has already been rejected. See Harmon II, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 242228
     at
    *41 (finding that Harmon I “was not a retroactive decision,” which would be “barred by the ex post facto
    prohibition” because “nothing in Harmon changed the meaning of the law in hindsight or created a ‘novel
    construction of [the] criminal statute.’” (alteration in original) (quoting Lanier, 
    520 U.S. at 266
    )).
    20