Bitcoin Depot has replaced its CEO and executive chairman in a sudden leadership overhaul that signals a forced maturation for the crypto ATM industry.
The world’s largest kiosk operator announced the departure of CEO Scott Buchanan and founder Brandon Mintz’s step-back from executive duties, bringing in former MoneyGram chief Alex Holmes to take the wheel. This follows immediately after Connecticut regulators issued a cease-and-desist order to shut down the company’s machines in the state.
JUST IN:
Bitcoin Depot has agreed to a $1.9M settlement with the state of Maine over crypto kiosk scam losses from 2022–2025, with victims required to submit claims by April 1, 2026. pic.twitter.com/4ADoG3TpRi
— Crypto Briefing (@Crypto_Briefing) January 6, 2026
The timing is not a coincidence. While the SEC filing describes the resignation as amicable, the regulatory walls are closing in. Bitcoin Depot’s stock has plummeted nearly 70% over the last year, and revenue is shrinking as compliance costs eat into the business model.
This is a pivot point for physical crypto access. The appointment of a traditional payment veteran suggests the company is moving away from aggressive expansion and toward survival through strict compliance.

The Mechanism: How the Bitcoin Depot ATM Spread Works
To understand why regulators are angry, you have to understand how a Bitcoin ATM actually makes money. Unlike a standard bank ATM that charges a flat fee of a few dollars, crypto kiosks often make money on the “spread.”
Think of the spread like the currency exchange booth at an airport. If the market price of Bitcoin is $100,000, the ATM might sell it to you for $115,000. That difference is the operator’s profit margin. It is often invisible to new users, who just see the amount of Bitcoin they are receiving.
Connecticut regulators allege that Bitcoin Depot violated the state’s 15% cap on these fees. The state’s Department of Banking found over 1,000 transactions where users were charged more than legally allowed. Furthermore, regulators accused the company of failing to properly refund victims of fraud.
This is where Alex Holmes comes in. As the former CEO of MoneyGram, he ran a massive global remittance network that had to comply with strict anti-money laundering (AML) laws. His job is to retrofit that level of strict banking compliance onto a network of Bitcoin kiosks that were originally designed for speed and anonymity.
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The Context: Closing the On-Ramp Gap
BITCOIN DEPOT TIGHTENS COMPLIANCE — ID CHECKS NOW REQUIRED AT CRYPTO ATMS
Bitcoin Depot has rolled out stricter compliance measures, now requiring customer ID verification at its crypto ATM locations.
This matters because expanding KYC requirements at on-the-ground crypto… pic.twitter.com/3oDHY7UbMU
— Crypto Town Hall (@Crypto_TownHall) February 25, 2026
This leadership shakeup is part of a much larger story. Regulators are systematically targeting the entry and exit points of the crypto economy. We have seen similar pressure applied through sanctions on crypto facilitators capable of moving illicit funds.
The message from authorities is consistent: if you touch fiat currency (cash or bank transfers), you must act like a bank. For years, crypto ATMs operated in a gray area, often serving as the easiest way for unbanked individuals to buy Bitcoin. But that ease of access made them a target for scammers and a blind spot for regulators.
The industry is bifurcating. On one side, highly regulated institutional platforms are gaining ground. Nasdaq recently won approval for tokenized securities, showing that the government is happy to bless crypto as long as Wall Street runs it. On the other hand, consumer-facing infrastructure, such as ATMs and prediction markets, is facing existential regulatory threats.
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The post Bitcoin Depot CEO Steps Down Amid Crypto ATM Crackdown appeared first on 99Bitcoins.


Bitcoin Depot has agreed to a $1.9M settlement with the state of Maine over crypto kiosk scam losses from 2022–2025, with victims required to submit claims by April 1, 2026. 