San Francisco authorities make arrest in stabbing of Cash App creator Bob Lee
The San Francisco Police Department has arrested a tech executive named Nima Momeni in connection with the April 4 stabbing of Cash App creator Bob Lee.
In an April 13 press conference, the SFPD announced that Momeni was in custody following the execution of search and arrest warrants in San Francisco and Emeryville, a city across the bay. Police chief Bill Scott said that “the evidence shows that [Momeni and Lee] knew each other” but did not comment on the motive of the stabbing, adding that the case was not yet closed.
The death of Lee, known by many in the tech world for creating the mobile payment service Cash App, sent shockwaves through the crypto space. The news that Lee knew Momeni suggested the attack was not random, despite some media outlets pointing to San Francisco as a “crime-ridden” city.
“We knew nothing about the facts of this case immediately after it happened — none of us did,” said San Francisco district attorney Brooke Jenkins. “My urging, through Twitter, through the news, was to really press upon not just the media but the residents of San Francisco and everyone else not to draw conclusions about what happened in this case.”
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It’s unclear at the time of publication what charges, if any, Momeni could face in connection to Lee’s death, but San Francisco Mayor London Breed referred to the case as a murder. In addition to developing Cash App, Lee had formally been the chief technology officer of Square — later rebranded as Block — the chief product officer of MobileCoin, and a father of two.
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