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Cooley expands fintech team

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Cooley is broadening its fintech capabilities with the appointment of Marco Santori and Patrick Murck.

Santori (pictured), an authority on digital currency and blockchain technology, joins Cooley as a partner based in the New York office and a leader of the firm’s global fintech practice.
 
Murck, also a digital currency and financial technology expert, joins as special counsel based in Boston. Both arrive from Pillsbury.
 
Santori is a recognised authority in the law of digital currencies and emerging blockchain technologies. He provides regulatory counsel to banks, broker-dealers, exchanges, wallets, payment processors and other companies making new and exciting uses of distributed ledger technology. His regulatory focus includes money services, securities and derivatives laws.
 
“Marco’s experience and leadership in the fintech industry is unparalleled,” says Mike Lincoln, partner and chair of Cooley’s business department. “Together with Patrick and the recent arrival of Andy Roth, Cooley is delivering a unique and powerfully positioned resource for the global fintech community as it navigates the complex regulatory issues surrounding the use of innovative technologies in the financial sector.”
 
Santori advises his clients on regulatory matters including compliance with money services (money transfer and payments, stored value cards and vouchers) and securities regulations. As the winner of the first annual Blockchain Award for Bitcoin Legal Expert, he is fluent in the Bank Secrecy Act and Patriot Act's application to digital currency businesses, including Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering regulation. Santori works closely with clients on securities and derivatives laws to structure their business plans to comply with these regulations and, where appropriate, avoid them entirely.
 
“Cooley has an established reputation for advising innovative clients that are breaking the status quo,” Santori says. “Cooley’s client base and industry dominance is a perfect match for my practice and I’m excited to begin working with the team.”
 
In addition to his new role at Cooley, Murck is a fellow at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, where he works on the Digital Finance Initiative. At the Berkman Klein Center he conducts research into the law and policy implications of blockchain technology, smart contracts and fintech. He also organises a series of Shared Ledger Roundtable meetings at Harvard Law School bringing together academics, open-source software developers and the public and private sectors to discuss legal frameworks for open financial systems. Murck is frequently called upon to advise policymakers and central banks as they develop a sound regulatory framework for distributed ledger technology and fintech.
 
Prior to this, Murck was a co-founder of the Bitcoin Foundation, serving as general counsel and later as executive director. He led the early public policy efforts that saw bitcoin and blockchain recognised as a beneficial innovation that should be supported through light-touch regulation. During that time, he organised and testified in the first US Senate Hearings on the topic. In light of these efforts he was recognised as one of the 50 Outstanding General Counsel in the US by the National Law Journal. Murck has also been involved in a number of digital currency and fintech startups as employee, entrepreneur and adviser.

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