Wyoming bitcoin miner Sean Murphy is upset with the stateâs the stateâs Select Committee on Blockchain, Financial Technology and Digital Innovation Technology, demanding the removal of two of members for a perceived conflict of interest.
In May, Murphyâs Bison Blockchain filed a $22 million lawsuit in Wyoming federal court against five companies based in Delaware and the Cayman Islands related to its bitcoin mines in Cheyenne.
Bison Blockchain alleges that about eight âcorporate entitiesâ run by Chinese nationals with varying levels of connections to companies in China â including the largest manufacturer of bitcoin miners in the world â had pushed his Wyoming-based company out of a five-year service agreement with Black Hills Energy.
This week, Murphy referred to his original agreement with Black Hills as the largest blockchain deal in Wyoming history, worth $175 million.
Court records show that a separate Chinese company also involved in bitcoin mining, YZY Capital Holdings, bought a separate plot of land near the other bitcoin mining facilities.
YZY was represented by Cheyenne law firm Hathaway and Kunz, a firm at which Select Committee member Matt Kaufman is an attorney and who Murphy said represented YZY on a previous project. Kaufman is considered a liaison member of the committee as a member of the public at large.
Kaufman told Cowboy State Daily he canât comment directly on his firmâs ongoing litigation, but said he doesnât personally represent YZY today and hasnât talked to this business âin a long time.â
Murphy said Hathaway and Kunz also represents another member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and requested that Kaufman either step down from the committee or have his firm stop representing CCP-backed entities.
Neither Kaufman nor any other member of the committee directly responded to this demand during the meeting.
Kaufman told Cowboy State Daily on Tuesday itâs common for people to not understand the legislative rules on decorum and called Murphyâs accusations âmisguidedâ and inaccurate.
âMr. Murphyâs attempts to misuse the legislative forum on an entirely different topic to draw attention to a contractual litigation dispute between his own company and a business partner, which our firm represents, is unfortunately not something we are permitted to comment on while in federal court,â Kaufman said. âIn the meantime, Hathaway & Kunz will continue to put our heads down and work, as we always have, to help build up, protect and strengthen our great state.â
Is It That Simple?
Murphy asserts that anyone who is a member of the CCP is an ideological enemy of American values.
âThatâs a conflict of interest,â Murphy said. âThis is an enemy of the United States and an enemy of the state.â
State Rep. Cyrus Western, R-Ranchester, co-chair of the committee, said itâs not so simple. He said although America should cast a suspicious eye on Chinese-owned businesses, hundreds of millions of dollars in Chinese money flows into the American economy every year and that any business from China is at least somewhat connected to the CCP.
Western said Chinese businesses operating in the U.S. should receive more scrutiny, but also shouldnât receive automatic rejection, as this would block legitimate commerce thatâs not a threat to American security interests.
âWe absolutely need to put an extra layer of scrutiny on everything,â Western said. âDoes that mean we automatically need to reject every type of commerce and transaction? No, of course not.â
Western also said just because a company is Chinese owned doesnât inherently make it an enemy, and that some of these companies are traded publicly on U.S. financial markets. As long as there is âa process for examination for scrutiny, and you still feel you can achieve your strategic objectives and ensure thereâs no malfeasance or foul play,â which Western said exists, he has no problem with it.
Murphy said he stands firmly against any political group that is killing women, children and the elderly.
âThatâs something we have to stand against,â he said.
Human rights groups have accused the Chinese government of detaining more than 1 million Muslim Uyghurs over the past few years in a large network of what the state calls "re-education camps." The CCP also has been accused of implementing a shoot-to-kill policy for those trying to escape.
Murphy attempted to bring his senator, Cheyenne Republican Affie Ellis, into the discussion, but she wasnât having it and said the discussion should be ended.
âI think weâve really veered off course,â she said. âI understand these are public forums, but itâs also one thing to start a conversation about the private workings of a law firm where thereâs confidentiality requirements about attorneys.â

Another Call-Out
Murphy also asked for the resignation of Wyoming Stable Token Commission member Jeff Wallace, a Cheyenne banker who until recently served on the Denver Branch Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
Murphy said one of the main purposes behind establishing Wyoming stable tokens was to hedge against a federal government-run digital currency. He believes the Wyoming stable token has been hijacked by the very interests it was designed to be protected from and compete against and requested any committee member with a conflict of interest to the federal reserve or any banking institution step down.
âThat was the entire premise that we were going to create something that wasnât a CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency) that provided people, Wyomingites, institutions, a financially free, liberty-focused way to transact,â he said.
Murphy said the lack of common knowledge for how stable tokens and cryptocurrency as a whole operates allows the federal government to take advantage of how it is implemented. As soon as he saw Wallace on the board, Murphy said he instantly suspected impropriety.
Wallace pointed out to Cowboy State Daily that his term on the Reserve Bank board expired at the end of 2022.
He also said Wyoming banks want to make sure they âare keeping track of whatâs going on with the stable coinsâ and how this new industry could affect the traditional banking industry in Wyoming.
âThatâs kind of my main concern is making sure weâre not disintermediating any deposits out of Wyoming banks that can be put to work in Wyoming, so Iâm not really sure where the conflict might be there,â Wallace said.
Although Rep. Daniel Singh, R-Cheyenne, a member of the committee, said he shares Murphyâs desire for liberty and freedom, he found the bitcoin minerâs allegations inappropriate.
âIt is because I believe in our foundational principles that I am inclined to assume that Mr. Wallace is innocent,â Singh said. âPutting someone on the spot during a public committee meeting is not an appropriate way to address a grievance.â
Both Kaufman and Wallace were appointed to the committee as non-voting, liaison members by Gov. Mark Gordon. Western said it would be Gordon who would have the power to remove these members from the committee.
âReckless Government Spendingâ
Also Monday, the Wyoming Stable Token Commission requested an $8 million to $12 million budget for the next biennium, a significant increase from the commissionâs current $650,000 budget.
Murphy considers this cost âreckless government spendingâ and fears it will be hidden somewhere within the 2024-2025 biennium budget. He believes the commission was originally proposed as a much modest enterprise.
âItâs pretty concerning that thereâs that much of a budget going to something where itâs not even going to be openly debated,â he told Cowboy State Daily.
Murphy had applied to be the executive director of the commission, but the committee instead chose Anthony Apollo for the role.
Western said the size of Apolloâs budget request is legitimate as the organization requires a staff with deep expertise and the use of high-level technology.
âThere are so many moving parts on a really granular level and for people who understand that, who can help implement that, arenât cheap,â Western said. âFrom a very high-level perspective, some of these things are very expensive.â
The Wyoming Stable Token Commission was established with the passage of Senate Enrolled Act 85 â Wyoming Stable Token Act, which authorizes the Wyoming Stable Token Commission to issue Wyoming stable tokens.
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.





