Jesse Powell, CEO of crypto exchange Kraken, has taken aim at regulators.
Kraken recently reached an agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in which it agreed to stop offering staking services or programmes to US clients.
It also agreed to pay $30 million in disgorgement, prejudgement interest and civil penalties.
Powell, who last September announced a decision to eventually step down as CEO and become chairman due to a lack of “fun” in the “draining” role, posited his theory on Twitter.
“I have a theory,” he wrote. “Regulators let the bad guys get big and blow up because it serves their agenda: destroy capital/resources in crypto ecosystem; burn people, deter adoption; give air cover to attack good actors.
“The bad guys are actually on-side. Good guys are the enemy. If the bad guys can run long enough without blowing up, they might just kill the good guys for you.”
Powell has said that regulators ignored their warnings about scams and fraud and that trying to do the right thing blew up in their faces.
“Bad guys operate with huge competitive advantages. They suck up users, revenue and venture capital that would otherwise have gone to good guys,” he added.
“BG can always be jailed later.”
This is likely a reference to Sam Bankman-Fried, who faces fraud charges later this year following the collapse of FTX.
Powell came under fire last year for criticising “woke activists” within the company while Kraken was investigated by the US Treasury Department for allegedly allowing Iranian users to use the platform in violation of international sanctions.
Kraken’s website states that its services are not available to users in Iran.
Over the past 11 years, Kraken has evolved from a bitcoin exchange into a crypto platform offering a suite of trading tools and educational resources, staking services, futures trading and an OTC desk.