DOJ Indicts German Citizen for Allegedly Laundering 2 Million Dollars in Dream Market Darknet Proceeds Into Gold Bars
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The US Department of Justice has indicted Owe Martin Andresen, a 49-year-old German citizen, for allegedly laundering approximately $2 million in cryptocurrency tied to Dream Market, one of the most prominent darknet marketplaces of its era. Prosecutors allege that Andresen, who operated under the online handle Speedstepper, was the long-unidentified main administrator of the platform, which ran from 2013 until it voluntarily shut down in 2019 amid law enforcement pressure. According to the indictment, Andresen accessed dormant Dream Market wallets in late 2022, routed the funds into new consolidated addresses, and then beginning in August 2023 used an Atlanta-based crypto service to purchase gold bars from international dealers who shipped the bullion directly to his home address in Germany.
Authorities arrested Andresen in Germany on May 7, seizing roughly $1.7 million in gold bullion, $23,000 in cash, and linking another $1.2 million across bank and crypto accounts to the marketplace. The method of converting crypto proceeds into physical gold and having it delivered to a residential address represents a notably direct laundering approach, one that ultimately left a traceable paper trail connecting the purchases back to the original darknet funds. Each of the 12 US counts in the indictment carries a maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison, while parallel charges filed in Germany carry up to five years each. Andresen's arrest closes one of the last remaining open threads from Dream Market's senior administration, with earlier prosecutions having already convicted admins operating under the handles Oxymonster, KITT3N, and GOWRON.