Celsius Network, a leading US-based cryptocurrency lending platform with a $3 billion valuation, announced last month that one of its senior employees was the focus of an Israeli police probe. The probe is subject to a gag order imposed by an Israeli judge and The Times of Israel is not permitted to reveal the name or identifying details of, or allegations against, the employee. The company announced on November 26 that it had suspended the employee.
The Times of Israel can reveal that a second senior Celsius Network employee, its chief revenue officer Roni Cohen-Pavon, in May established a side business with a convicted money launderer.
Celsius Network, founded in 2017, employs over 100 people in Israel. It operates as a kind of crypto bank that allows clients to deposit cryptocurrency and borrow either cryptocurrency or US dollars. The company recently attracted $750 million in funding from prominent investors, including a Canadian pension fund, and says it manages $26 billion in deposits โ compared to $1 billion a year ago. It claims not merely to be benefiting consumers but to be โushering in a new economyโ in which traditional banks will be rendered obsolete by cryptocurrency platforms.
In May, Cohen-Pavon, the Celsius Networkโs CRO, registered a new company in Israel with two partners, one of whom is Eliran Oved, a convicted money launderer who went on to run a binary options website.
Eliran Oved spent a year in Israeli prison for running an…