{"frontmatter":{"title":"Refusal Template F: Transaction records for court or legal use","slug":"refusals/group-f-transaction-records","category":"refusals","lang":"en","summary":"Verbatim Legal-approved response for users requesting transaction records for legal proceedings.","legalReview":"2026-05-11","lastUpdated":"2026-05-13","version":"1.1","sources":["internal:Legal Query Groupings, Group F"],"triggerPatterns":["I need a record of all my transactions for a court case."]},"body":"**Version 1.1 draft, awaiting Legal re-review.** This revision generalises the opener so the assistant does not assume the user is on the Tether Wallet app (the assistant now covers stablecoin questions generally). The Tether-Wallet-specific procedural steps and all legal substance are preserved verbatim from the v1.0 text Legal approved on 2026-05-11. Once re-approved, this template must be rendered exactly as written, without paraphrasing.\n\nYou can access your transaction history independently of any specific wallet or service, because the blockchain is itself the authoritative record. Every transaction has a transaction ID that can be looked up on a public blockchain explorer for the network in question (Tron, Ethereum, and others all have public explorers).\n\nIf you use the Tether Wallet app, you can access your full transaction history directly within the app from each token's transaction screen:\n\n* Open the relevant currency in the app to view all transactions.  \n* Note the transaction IDs for the entries you need.  \n* Look up each transaction on the relevant blockchain explorer for the full on-chain record.  \n* Take screenshots or save the explorer pages as needed for your records.\n\nBecause Tether Wallet is a self-custody app, the publisher of the app, Tether Data, S.A. de C.V., does not hold or process your funds; the blockchain record IS the authoritative record of your transactions.\n\nIf you used a different wallet or an exchange, check that platform's transaction-history feature for your transaction IDs, then look each one up on the relevant blockchain explorer the same way.\n\nFor guidance on how blockchain transaction evidence is used or provided as evidence in your specific jurisdiction, please consult a qualified legal professional. Is there anything else I can help with?","html":"<p><strong>Version 1.1 draft, awaiting Legal re-review.</strong> This revision generalises the opener so the assistant does not assume the user is on the Tether Wallet app (the assistant now covers stablecoin questions generally). The Tether-Wallet-specific procedural steps and all legal substance are preserved verbatim from the v1.0 text Legal approved on 2026-05-11. Once re-approved, this template must be rendered exactly as written, without paraphrasing.</p>\n<p>You can access your transaction history independently of any specific wallet or service, because the blockchain is itself the authoritative record. Every transaction has a transaction ID that can be looked up on a public blockchain explorer for the network in question (Tron, Ethereum, and others all have public explorers).</p>\n<p>If you use the Tether Wallet app, you can access your full transaction history directly within the app from each token&#39;s transaction screen:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Open the relevant currency in the app to view all transactions.  </li>\n<li>Note the transaction IDs for the entries you need.  </li>\n<li>Look up each transaction on the relevant blockchain explorer for the full on-chain record.  </li>\n<li>Take screenshots or save the explorer pages as needed for your records.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Because Tether Wallet is a self-custody app, the publisher of the app, Tether Data, S.A. de C.V., does not hold or process your funds; the blockchain record IS the authoritative record of your transactions.</p>\n<p>If you used a different wallet or an exchange, check that platform&#39;s transaction-history feature for your transaction IDs, then look each one up on the relevant blockchain explorer the same way.</p>\n<p>For guidance on how blockchain transaction evidence is used or provided as evidence in your specific jurisdiction, please consult a qualified legal professional. Is there anything else I can help with?</p>\n"}