Sentencing

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Surveillance-style photo of a burning Cybertruck inside a Tesla dealership during arson attack in Mesa, Arizona.
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Mesa man gets five years for arson at Tesla dealership

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Ian William Moses, a 35-year-old from Mesa, Arizona, was sentenced to five years in federal prison for setting fire to a Tesla dealership and destroying a Cybertruck in April 2025. The attack, captured on surveillance video, was described as politically motivated and endangered public safety. Prosecutors emphasized that such acts will face full accountability.

Rapper Boosie Badazz, legally Torence Hatch, was sentenced Friday to time served, three years of supervised release, a $50,000 fine and 300 hours of community service for possessing a firearm as a felon—lighter than prosecutors' two-year prison recommendation—in San Diego federal court.

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US federal courts have handed down a total of about 83 years in prison terms to crypto company leaders since early 2024, with Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon receiving 15 years in December 2025 for fraud related to the TerraUSD and Luna collapse. This sentencing wave, driven by major platform failures like FTX and Celsius, suggests a run rate of roughly 41 prison-years per year. The figures highlight a shift from civil penalties to custodial outcomes in crypto enforcement.

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