Senate candidate accepts donations in bitcoin and gives away AR-15 rifles

September 25, 2017 3:36 PM

Still, the Federal Election Commission took enough notice of the trend to issue an advisory opinion in 2014, allowing bitcoin donations as in-kind gifts. The committee that received the contribution in bitcoin would report its value based on the bitcoin’s market value at the time the contribution was received. The limits are the same as for cash contributions. Those limits are $2,700 per election for individual contributors and $5,000 per election for multi-candidate PACs.

Campaigns also are allowed to hold bitcoin in digital wallets until using them to purchase goods or services for the campaign.

“Holding bitcoins in a bitcoin wallet does not relieve the committee of its obligations to return or refund a bitcoin contribution that is from a prohibited source, exceeds the contributor’s contribution limit, or is otherwise not legal,” according to the Federal Election Commission.

On Petersen’s website, AustinPetersen.com, donors can use their digital wallets to enter the amount of the bitcoin transaction. Although bitcoin is essentially untraceable, Petersen’s donors must input all their personal information, as required by the FEC. Then the site does an instantaneous exchange from bitcoin to dollars.

“It locks you into the market price for whatever the bitcoin is at that point,” Petersen said.

“The other day, someone tried to donate 1 bitcoin, which was like five grand, and unfortunately it was rejected,” Petersen said. His site couldn’t handle such a large bitcoin donation at the time.

The Petersen campaign has since updated its site and its bitpay account, and now can accept bitcoin donations up to an equivalent of $10,000 per day. “That’s the total number, not per person,” said Petersen’s campaign manager, Jeffrey Carson, in an email. “We’re still held to FEC rules, regardless (i.e., $2,700 per person per election).”

Carson said the campaign will be releasing quarterly fundraising numbers early next week, including bitcoin totals. He said there hasn’t been much by way of bitcoin yet, only about an amount valued at $200 to $300.

Overall, Petersen’s Senate campaign has raised about $200,000.

For now, he hopes his commitment to bitcoin — and the currency’s appeal to Internet-savvy libertarian types — can help distinguish him from the fundraising juggernauts of McCaskill and Republican Attorney Gen. Josh Hawley, the top GOP Senate prospect in Missouri.

But Petersen’s realistic.

“We’re not going to out fund-raise (Hawley), and we’re not going to out-raise Claire,” he said. “Not even with bitcoin.”

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