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OpenSea Insider Trading Case Ends Without A Retrial – Details

23 January 2026 at 18:00

Nathaniel Chastain, a former product manager at OpenSea, will not face a retrial after federal prosecutors chose to drop their re-review of his insider trading case.

Reports say the US Attorney’s Office reached a deferred prosecution agreement with Chastain that will lead to dismissal of the charges once the agreement runs its course.

What Prosecutors Decided

Prosecutors told a Manhattan federal court they would not retry Chastain following an appeals court ruling that tossed his earlier conviction.

Under the deferred prosecution deal, the government will dismiss the case about a month after notifying the court, and Chastain has agreed to forfeit roughly 15.98 ETH tied to the trades. He has already served three months in prison from his original sentence.

How The Appeals Court Changed The Case

According to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the jury in the first trial had been given the wrong instructions about what the wire fraud law covers.

The judges said confidential information only counts as property under the statute when it has commercial value to the employer, and jurors might otherwise convict someone for behavior that is unethical but not criminal. That legal point is at the heart of the reversal.

Reports note that prosecutors had called the matter the first-ever insider trading case tied to NFTs. Now, lower courts and enforcement teams will have to think carefully before using traditional fraud laws to police activity in NFT markets.

The ruling highlights a gap between old statutes and new kinds of online goods, which may push lawmakers to give clearer rules for how to treat confidential business signals related to crypto platforms.

OpenSea: The Case’s Earlier Chapters

Chastain was first charged in mid-2022 after prosecutors said he bought certain NFTs before they were featured on OpenSea’s homepage, then sold them after prices rose.

He was convicted at trial in 2023 of wire fraud and money laundering and received a sentence that included three months behind bars. The US Attorney’s Office originally described the scheme as a novel use of insider knowledge in digital markets.

With the deferred prosecution agreement in place for OpenSea, prosecutors can close this chapter without a new trial.

Chastain’s forfeiture of crypto assets and his already served time mean the government has secured some remedy, while the appellate decision leaves open big questions about when private business information can be treated as property for federal fraud charges.

Legal teams, judges, and regulators are likely to keep a close eye on how similar cases are handled in the future.

Featured image from Getty Images, chart from TradingView

DOJ Drops OpenSea NFT Fraud Case After Appeals Court Overturns Conviction

23 January 2026 at 07:06

US prosecutors have formally dropped their case against former OpenSea manager Nathaniel Chastain following an appeals court reversal that dismantled what was once positioned as the first NFT insider trading prosecution in American history.

According to sources, the Justice Department announced Wednesday it would enter a one-month deferred prosecution agreement before dismissing the indictment with prejudice.

The decision closes a chapter that began in June 2022 when Chastain was arrested and charged with wire fraud and money laundering for using confidential information to purchase NFTs before they were featured on OpenSea’s homepage.

The case attracted widespread attention as prosecutors attempted to apply traditional financial crime statutes to emerging digital asset markets.

Appeals Court Ruling Undermines Prosecution’s Foundation

Manhattan US Attorney Jay Clayton, a former SEC chair, told the federal court that prosecutors would not retry the case given Chastain had already served three months in prison and agreed not to contest forfeiture of 15.98 ETH worth $47,330.

β€œThe interest of the United States will be best served by deferring prosecution of this matter and not retrying the case,” Clayton wrote in the court filing.

DOJ OpenSea NFT Fraud Case - Clayton's Letter
Jay Clayton’s letter. | Source: Cointelegraph

The collapse stems from a July 2024 appeals court decision that found the trial jury received flawed instructions.

The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that jurors were improperly told they could convict Chastain based solely on unethical behavior rather than actual theft of property with commercial value.

Judge Steven Menashi wrote last year August that the lower court erred by allowing conviction even if the information Chastain used lacked tangible value to OpenSea.

The appeals panel sharply criticized jury instructions that permitted conviction based on violations of β€œbroad notions of honesty and fair play,” warning such standards could criminalize nearly any deceptive act.

The court found the featured NFT data was not monetized by OpenSea and was not treated internally as a valuable asset, making it too β€œethereal” to qualify as property under federal wire fraud statutes.

Original Conviction Built on Novel Legal Theory

Chastain was convicted in May 2023 after prosecutors accused him of exploiting his role to buy dozens of NFTs shortly before they appeared on OpenSea’s homepage between June and September 2021.

After tokens were featured and prices increased, he sold them at two- to five-times profit using anonymous wallets. The government alleged he made over $57,000 through the scheme.

US Attorney Damian Williams had described the case as a warning to digital asset markets when announcing charges. β€œNFTs might be new, but this type of criminal scheme is not,” Williams said.

β€œAs alleged, Nathaniel Chastain betrayed OpenSea by using its confidential business information to make money for himself.β€œ

The conviction came after a week-long trial, with prosecutors charging wire fraud rather than securities fraud since NFTs have not been legally classified as securities.

More than 300 defense attorneys had filed letters supporting dismissal, arguing that treating confidential business information as property would β€œcriminalize a broad swath of conduct.β€œ

Broader Regulatory Retreat Under Trump Administration

The dropped prosecution aligns with a broader shift in federal crypto enforcement under the Trump administration.

As reported by Cryptonews earlier today, a Cornerstone Research report found the SEC initiated just 13 crypto-related actions in 2025, down 60% from 33 in 2024 and the lowest level since 2017.

The agency has dismissed multiple high-profile cases including those against Coinbase, Kraken, Consensys, and Cumberland DRW.

The SEC also closed its investigation into OpenSea in February 2025 after issuing a Wells notice in August 2024 that alleged the platform functioned as an unregistered securities marketplace.

🌊 The SEC has officially ended its investigation into NFT marketplace @OpenSea, according to the company’s founder, @dfinzer.#SEC #OpenSeahttps://t.co/OtOT6c3WMd

β€” Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) February 22, 2025

At that time, OpenSea founder Devin Finzer called the closure β€œa win for everyone who is creating and building in our space.β€œ

For now, Chastain will not face supervision by US Pretrial Services and can seek return of the $50,000 fine and special assessment paid following his conviction.

Notably, the global NFT market cap currently stands at $2.56 billion, down 6.72% in the last 24 hours with total sales volume reaching $3.68 million, according to CoinGecko data.

DOJ OpenSea NFT Fraud Case - CoinGecko Chart
Source: CoinGecko

The figure represents an 84.78% decline from the market’s peak of $16.82 billion in April 2022, when digital collectibles were among the hottest assets in crypto and the Chastain case was first unfolding.

The post DOJ Drops OpenSea NFT Fraud Case After Appeals Court Overturns Conviction appeared first on Cryptonews.

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