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nerf0 | 3 years ago

I don't see a problem. Of course banks want KYC, but that doesn't stop you from selling the crypto on e.g. Coinbase (also KYC'ed) and sending to your bank.

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jon-wood|3 years ago

If you deposit a quarter million dollars into your bank account out of the blue the bank are absolutely going to ask you where it came from, and "don't worry yourself with that", or even "I sold some crypto" are unlikely to be sufficient answer to avoid your account being frozen and a note sent to the relevant authorities.

prvit|3 years ago

>or even "I sold some crypto" are unlikely to be sufficient answer to avoid your account being frozen

For 99% of banks, you'd be totally wrong about that.

> a note sent to the relevant authorities.

This, of course, means literally nothing. Banks will "send a note" for just about any reason. This results in said authorities drowning under a mountain of millions of pointless suspicious activity reports.

PretzelPirate|3 years ago

> If you deposit a quarter million dollars into your bank account out of the blue the bank are absolutely going to ask you where it came from,

I've deposited a larger lump sum into a US bank account and was never asked where it came from. I was then able to use that money the same day to pay off a loan.

ndaiger|3 years ago

What they actually tend to do is have someone in management call to congratulate you and invite you to discuss banking products. I know this from personal experience.

from|3 years ago

In the worst case your funds would be frozen for a couple months then you’d get a letter saying we are closing your account for compliance reasons and attached would be a cashiers check for the balance of your account. Then they’d file a SAR that would get put in a queue behind the millions of others because the government only reads a small fraction of them.