A newly released trove of U.S. Department of Justice documents confirms that convicted financier Jeffrey Epstein made a $3 million investment in cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase through Blockchain Capital in 2014.
Recently unsealed DOJ documents and leaked emails have exposed that Jeffrey Epstein, through Blockchain Capital, invested in Coinbase during the crypto exchange’s early fundraising round in 2014. Internal communications suggest that Coinbase executives were aware of Epstein’s background, raising concerns about early due diligence and the crypto industry’s unchecked capital sources.
According to the DOJ files, Epstein’s $3 million contribution to Coinbase was made via Blockchain Capital, a venture firm co-founded by Tether’s Brock Pierce. At the time, Coinbase was valued at around $400 million, placing Epstein’s stake at approximately 0.75%. If retained, that investment would have been worth tens of millions by the time Coinbase went public in 2021.
An email trail indicates that Fred Ehrsam, co-founder of Coinbase, may have been aware of Epstein’s identity and possibly met with him. In one message, Ehrsam said:
The mention of “Jeff” and other context in the documents point to Epstein. Another email from 2018 confirmed that Epstein received his Coinbase allocation, and it appears he later sold half of it back to Blockchain Capital for about $11 million.
The documents contain additional revelations suggesting the initial $3 million investment may have been increased to $15 million in equity. A leaked communication shows Brock Pierce informing Epstein that $15 million had been wired for Coinbase investment, and that Epstein would also receive $5 million in cash back, pending the deal’s completion. However, whether this expanded deal was finalized remains uncertain.
Beyond Coinbase, Epstein was linked to Blockstream, a blockchain tech firm. DOJ files include a 2014 email from Blockstream co-founder Austin Hill to Epstein and Joi Ito (then MIT Media Lab director) about a seed round. Hill noted that their allocation had been increased from $50K to $500K at the request of another investor.
In response to these revelations, Blockstream CEO Adam Back stated, “Blockstream has no direct nor indirect financial connection with Jeffrey Epstein, or his estate.” He added that Ito’s fund, where Epstein was a limited partner, briefly held a minority stake in Blockstream before divesting due to potential conflict concerns.
Epstein’s investment underscores the loose standards and limited regulatory scrutiny that defined early crypto fundraising. From 2012 to 2015, the crypto space was often referred to as a “wild west,” where venture deals were driven by connections and technology hype rather than structured vetting processes.
Key issues highlighted by experts include:
This case also raises questions for Coinbase, a publicly listed company that has since built a reputation around regulatory compliance. The presence of a convicted felon in its early cap table even indirectly could become a reputational flashpoint as scrutiny over past fundraising intensifies.
In my experience watching crypto’s evolution, stories like this are reminders that the early crypto boom was driven as much by speed and connections as by innovation. Epstein’s $3 million stake in Coinbase might have seemed like just another deal back in 2014, but now it casts a long shadow on how early capital shaped today’s crypto giants.
The fact that emails suggest Epstein’s identity and background were known adds a layer of discomfort. It tells us that reputational risk was not always taken seriously, even among companies like Coinbase that are now cornerstones of mainstream crypto adoption.
This isn’t just about Epstein. It’s about whether crypto is ready to face and own the uncomfortable parts of its origin story. For those of us who believe in the future of digital assets, accountability is not optional. It’s overdue.
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