Oct 14, 2020 at 07:02 UTCUpdated Oct 14, 2020 at 07:30 UTC.Coinbase's chief compliance officer, Jeff Horowitz, is leaving the firm after two years.
First reported by The Block, Horowitz joins at least 60 other employees in leaving the exchange - roughly 5% of the company's headcount.
The majority of those departures come in response to Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently declaring an "Apolitical" non-activist stance against social issues at the company.
It was not immediately clear if Horowitz is leaving for the same reason.
It finally reached a point when Armstrong told those who did not agree with his company's position to take a severance package.
Horowitz joined Coinbase back in 2018 as the firm's first CCO, where he was charged with guiding the exchange's anti-money laundering policies and handling regulatory compliance.
He previously spent 12 years leading the compliance team at Pershing, a BNY Mellon company, and also one of the largest providers of brokerage custody.
During his career, Horowitz also took efforts to shape financial regulation in the U.S with his involvement in industry associations such as the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
"We're grateful for his service and wish him the best in the future," a Coinbase spokesperson said.
"While we conduct a search for our new CCO our chief legal officer Paul Grewal will take over day-to-day responsibility."
Coinbase Chief Compliance Officer Departs Amid Wider Exodus
Udgivet den Oct 14, 2020
by Coindesk | Udgivet den Coinage
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