Former Binance director Vladimir Smerkis sentenced to five years for fraud
The ex-head of Binance's Russia/CIS operations was convicted of taking roughly $110,000 for promotional services that were never delivered.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 15, 2026Vladimir Smerkis, who once ran Binance’s operations across Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States, has been sentenced to five years in prison by a Moscow court. The charge: large-scale fraud under Part 4 of Article 159 of the Russian Criminal Code.
The case centers on an almost comically straightforward allegation. Smerkis allegedly took approximately $110,000, or 8.8 million rubles, from crypto blogger and trader Oleg Polunin in exchange for advertising and promotional services. Those services, prosecutors say, were never delivered. The money was reportedly spent on personal expenses instead.
What happened
The arrangement between Smerkis and Polunin was supposed to be a traffic-boosting deal. Polunin paid for promotion services designed to increase his user reach. The difference here is that the work apparently never materialized.
Advertisement " document.getElementById("alkimi-leaderboard").innerHTML = iFrame var iframeDoc = document.getElementById(idIFrame).contentWindow.document pbjs.renderAd(iframeDoc, highestCpmBids[0].adId); } } setTimeout(function () { renderAds(); }, FAILSAFE_TIMEOUT);Prosecutors argued that Smerkis pocketed the funds and used them for his own benefit. The court agreed, handing down the five-year sentence.
The verdict is not yet final. Smerkis retains the right to appeal.
There is no indication that Binance as a company is connected to or implicated in the charges. This appears to be a personal legal matter tied to Smerkis’s individual conduct, not his corporate role. The fraud allegations relate to a private arrangement between Smerkis and Polunin rather than any exchange-level activity.
From Binance executive to Blum co-founder
Smerkis led Binance’s Russia and CIS division from early 2022 until September 2023. He subsequently co-founded Blum, a Telegram-based mini-game in the crypto community.
For Binance, this is a non-event in any direct sense. The exchange has dealt with far larger legal battles, including its $4.3B settlement with US authorities in 2023. A former regional head catching a fraud conviction for personal conduct barely registers on that scale.
Investors in Blum or anyone doing business with Smerkis’s associates should monitor whether the appeal proceeds and on what timeline. A successful appeal would change the narrative entirely. A failed one cements a five-year absence from the industry for a figure who, until recently, was actively building in the space.
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