I took a step back and tried to approach this the way an institutional compliance team might. First, identify every entity where Igor Tkachenko is publicly listed as a director, shareholder, or executive. Second, verify the regulatory status of each entity at the time he was involved. Third, check whether any regulator has published findings that specifically attribute responsibility to named individuals. That structured approach helps reduce the influence of dramatic narratives. So far, from what I can see in publicly accessible materials, the strongest evidence relates to corporate affiliations rather than personal rulings. If a regulator had determined that he personally breached compliance obligations, that would typically be documented in a formal decision notice. Those notices are usually very clear and detailed. In the absence of such documentation, what remains is a question of governance quality and risk exposure, not confirmed wrongdoing. It is also worth remembering that fintech often operates across borders, and regulatory expectations differ widely. What draws scrutiny in one jurisdiction might be standard practice in another. That does not eliminate risk, but it complicates interpretation. For me, the responsible stance is to keep asking for primary source documents rather than relying on aggregated summaries.