1. Home
  2. crime

crime

Swedish Bitcoiners targeted by armed criminals

Swedish cryptocurrency proponent Eric Wall has flagged targeted attacks on well-known BTC community members.

Criminals in Sweden are specifically targeting prominent local Bitcoin figures, which appears to be the result of the ease of access to personal information and residential addresses in the country.

Reports from Swedish media outlets LT and Aftonbladet have linked separate robberies in Rönninge and Södertälje that appear to have occurred under the same modus operandi. Victims were tied up and physically abused to steal physical and virtual Bitcoin (BTC) holdings.

Prominent cryptocurrency proponent Eric Wall, who currently serves as a StarkNet Foundation board member, highlighted the incidents in an X post (formerly Twitter). Wall said the two assault cases indicate that Swedish criminals are actively looking to target Bitcoin users.

“This Monday, a middle-aged Swedish couple was tied up in their home and robbed by 4 masked men. They were physically abused and threatened with their own kitchen knives. They were tied up for hours and one had to be escorted to the hospital via helicopter,” Wall wrote.

He noted that the purpose of the assault was to steal the couple’s Bitcoin before highlighting the link to a separate incident where “two well-known Bitcoin/crypto profiles were targeted in their homes by masked, armed men.”

According to Wall, the victims were subjected to violent physical abuse for hours in an effort to steal their Bitcoin holdings held in hardware wallets. He added that the first incident of criminals targeting Bitcoin users took place in 2022, when “one of Sweden’s most well-known Bitcoiners” had their apartment broken into.

Related: UK passes bill to enable authorities to seize Bitcoin used for crime

Wall also believes criminals scour social media to identify and target Bitcoin or cryptocurrency users. He claims that a common theme of the attacks was that they took place shortly after individuals had livestreamed podcasts focused on Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies or mentioned the subject in public.

He also believes that Sweden’s Offentlighetsprincipen (Principle of Public Access to Information) laws, which give the public the right to request information, including residential addresses and tax records from the government, are becoming a means for criminals to prey on ecosystem participants.

“While the intention behind this legislation was to reduce corruption, it is not fit for modern society.”

Wall added that he left the country due to these laws and that Sweden “is probably one of the least safe countries to be active in the cryptocurrency sector.”

The Offentlighetsprincipen law also reportedly makes it easy for citizens to search for Swedish residents’ addresses as well as scour their tax records. This is being abused, as criminals can ascertain how much an individual has paid in income or capital gains tax and “size them up” as a result.

Cointelegraph has reached out to the Swedish Police Authority to ascertain further details of these incidents and if any arrests have been made.

Magazine: Blockchain detectives: Mt. Gox collapse saw birth of Chainalysis

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

What’s next for the ‘crypto king’ Sam Bankman-Fried?

The former FTX CEO is headed back to prison and awaits a potential second trial in March, while his lawyers pledged to “continue to vigorously fight the charges against him."

Sam Bankman-Fried is back in his federal prison cell in Brooklyn after being found guilty for all seven charges in his criminal trial. His lawyers however, say the fight isn’t yet over.

Bankman-Fried’s attorney Mark Cohen said in a Nov. 2 statement that Bankman-Fried “maintains his innocence and will continue to vigorously fight the charges against him."

If Bankman-Fried follows through then it’s possible he will appeal after being sentenced. The first step would see the FTX co-founder file a notice of appeal in the New York District Court where he was just found guilty.

Bankman-Fried was hit with a guilty verdict from the jury on late Nov. 2 in New York. United States Attorney Damian Willaims called Bankman-Fried one of the biggest financial frauds in American history and perpetrator of “a multibillion-dollar scheme designed to make him the king of crypto."

Bankman-Fried faces the possibility of an another criminal trial slated for March 11 on five charges of bribery conspiracy, conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business, bank fraud conspiracy along with derivatives and securities fraud.

New York District Court Judge Lewis Kaplan gave government prosecutors a Feb. 1, 2024 deadline to confirm if they will still pursue the second trial.

If that goes ahead, Bankman-Fried has the option to plead guilty which could help reduce his sentence.

As for the recent guilty verdict — prosecutors will recommend a sentence by March 15, and will see Bankman-Fried will return to court for sentencing on March 28, 2024.

Kaplan however, will have the final say on how much time Bankman-Fried will serve. If Bankman-Fried served the maximum sentences for his crimes back-to-back he would be in jail for 110 years.

Kaplan, however, could instead decide that Bankman-Fried will serve his sentence concurrently. If so, his wire fraud, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy crimes alone each carry a maximum 20-year sentence.

Former federal prosecutor turned crypto venture capitalist Kathryn Haun said in a Nov. 2 X (Twitter) post that she thinks Bankman-Fried will likely spend “decades in prison.”

In the meantime, Bankman-Fried will stay in jail at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn where he’s been incarcerated since Aug. 11 after breaking his bail conditions.

Kaplan previously said the Brooklyn jail was “not on anybody’s list of five-star facilities” and during Bankman-Fried’s time there before the trial, he complained about his lack of access to medication and vegan food.

Related: How long could Sam Bankman-Fried go to jail for? Crypto lawyers weigh in

In September, a week before the start of Bankman-Fried’s trial, lawyers gave mixed predictions as to how long his sentence would be.

Loevy & Loevy partner Michael Kanovitz said if Bankman-Fried was found guilty, “I think he will get the maximum sentence.”

Hogan & Hogan partner Jeremy Hogan predicted Bankman-Fried may not have the book thrown at him and get the maximum 110-year sentence but he’ll be “going to prison for quite some time.”

“I don’t know enough about it to get into details,” Hogan said. “Just a long time — more than 10 years.”

Magazine: Slumdog billionaire 2 — ‘Top 10… brings no satisfaction’ says Polygon’s Sandeep Nailwal

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Bitcoin no longer asset of choice for criminals – former Elliptic crypto advisor

Criminals have moved away from using Bitcoin for money laundering, with stablecoins emerging as an alternative due to accessibility.

Crime in Web3 is shifting away from Bitcoin (BTC) to stablecoins while ponzi schemes remain prevalent, according to Elliptic’s former head of technical crypto advisory.

Tara Annison shared the latest insights from the murky world of cryptocurrency-related crime during a presentation on the final day of EthCC in Paris, addressing a wide variety of ways in which digitals assets are either facilitating crime or being used to launder funds.

According to Annison, Bitcoin is no longer the cryptocurrency of choice to carry out illicit activities or launder money. As the cryptocurrency industry has matured, the establishment of decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, mixing services and stablecoins present new avenues for criminals to explore.

Source: Tara Annison.

Criminals have shifted towards using dollar-denominated assets, like USD Coin (USDC), as their easy accessibility and ability to be laundered through decentralized exchanges (DEXs).

“The criminals use that as a target point. It's also super easy to launder through Dex's. There's deep liquidity, really good volume, so that's pretty worrying.”

Annison highlighted a potential silver lining from a law enforcement perspective, noting that centralized issuers like Circle could freeze specific USDC tokens before criminals are able to “off ramp out of the asset” into fiat through DEXs or centralized exchanges.

“What we're seeing now is an increased number of accounts with USDC and USDC being blacklisted, and these are frozen funds that the criminals now can't access.”

Ponzi and pyramid schemes remain a feature of the sector, with Annison noting that $7.8 billion were stolen from unwitting victims of these types of scams.

Related: How the IRS seized $10B worth of crypto using blockchain analytics

Criminals are finding more sophisticated ways to launder funds. Annison said chain swapping and asset swapping is prevalent as criminals try to hide illicit activity.

“We've seen that to the tune of about $4.1 billion. So they hop across using a dex. They use a coin swap service, they use a mixer, they use a bridge, all basically to try and throw blockchain analytics firms off the trail.”

Annison said that $1.2 billion stolen from DEXs eventually ends up on centralized exchanges. In comparison to previous years, scams in the sector are down 46%. The reason, according to Annison, is the ongoing bear market which has inevitably made the sector less appealing for cybercriminals.

“They're less hyped up, the prices are lower, so it's not as profitable for criminals. So at least next time we're in a bear market. Do bear in mind that the scams are at least down.”

Annison also touched in the increasing use of cryptocurrencies to evade sanctions and finance terrorist activities, highlighting TRON and USDT as popular assets for illicit use.

The advent of metaverse experiences has also seen the space attract nefarious actors. Various crimes are also emerging in virtual worlds, including phishing attacks, NFT theft, wallet tainting, and augmented reality hacks.

Annison’s presentation highlighted the reality of criminal activity in the sector, which will demand increased vigilance and security measures to protect users and combat illicit activities.

Magazine: US enforcement agencies are turning up the heat on crypto-related crime

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Meta’s Zuckerberg grilled by senators over ‘leak’ of LLaMA AI model

The senators weren’t happy with the “seemingly minimal” protections to fight against fraud and cybercrime in Meta’s AI model.

Two United States senators have questioned Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg over the tech giant’s “leaked” artificial intelligence model, LLaMA, which they claim is potentially “dangerous” and could be used for “criminal tasks.”

In a June 6 letter, U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal and Josh Hawley criticized Zuckerberg’s decision to open source LLaMA, claiming there were “seemingly minimal” protections in Meta’s “unrestrained and permissive” release of the AI model.

While the senators acknowledged the benefits of open-source software they concluded Meta’s “lack of thorough, public consideration of the ramifications of its foreseeable widespread dissemination” was ultimately a “disservice to the public.”

LLaMA was initially given a limited online release to researchers but was leaked in full by a user from the image board site 4chan in late February, with the senators writing:

“Within days of the announcement, the full model appeared on BitTorrent, making it available to anyone, anywhere in the world, without monitoring or oversight.”

Blumenthal and Hawley said they expect LLaMA to be easily adopted by spammers and those who engage in cybercrime to facilitate fraud and other “obscene material.”

The two contrasted the differences between OpenAI’s ChatGPT-4 and Google’s Bard — two close source models — with LLaMA to highlight how easily the latter can generate abusive material:

“When asked to ‘write a note pretending to be someone’s son asking for money to get out of a difficult situation,' OpenAI’s ChatGPT will deny the request based on its ethical guidelines. In contrast, LLaMA will produce the letter requested, as well as other answers involving self-harm, crime, and antisemitism.”

While ChatGPT is programmed to deny certain requests, users have been able to “jailbreak” the model and have it generate responses it normally wouldn’t.

In the letter, the senators asked Zuckerberg whether any risk assessments were conducted prior to LLaMA’s release, what Meta has done to prevent or mitigate damage since its release and when Meta utilizes its user’s personal data for AI research, among other requests.

Related: ‘Biased, deceptive’: Center for AI accuses ChatGPT creator of violating trade laws

OpenAI is reportedly working on an open-source AI model amid increased pressure from the advancements made by other open-source models. Such advancements were highlighted in a leaked document written by a senior software engineer at Google.

Open-sourcing the code for an AI model enables others to modify the model to serve a particular purpose and also allows other developers to make contributions of their own.

Magazine: AI Eye: Make 500% from ChatGPT stock tips? Bard leans left, $100M AI memecoin

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

How the IRS seized $10B worth of crypto using blockchain analytics

A public-private partnership with blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis has played a key role in helping the Internal Revenue Service solve cryptocurrency-related crimes.

Blockchain analysis has been key in helping the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) seize an estimated $10 billion worth of cryptocurrency since it began investigating a broad body of crimes involving digital assets.

This was a key point raised by IRS Criminal Investigations (IRS-CI) Chief Jim Lee in a wide-ranging, exclusive interview with Cointelegraph in Amsterdam. Lee was among a variety of delegates from public and private institutions sharing knowledge and insights at blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis’ Links conference held in the Netherlands.

Lee, alongwith with a cohort from the IRS-CI, gave an inside look at how the enforcement agency has tackled the use of cryptocurrency and digital assets in a wide variety of financial crimes that fall under its purview.

Hacks of prominent exchanges, Decentralized Finance protocols and cross-chain bridges have seen a spike in stolen funds over the past two years. Source: Chainalysis 2023 Crypto Crime Report

Chief Lee has served as a special agent with the IRS for 28 years and has been at the helm of the unit since 2020. In the years leading up to his tenure, the IRS-CI has found an increasing amount of criminal investigations involving digital assets in varying degrees land on the desks of its agents.

Related: IRS prepares for an increase in crypto cases in the upcoming tax season

The IRS’ relationship with the cryptocurrency space began in earnest in the early 2010s as Bitcoin (BTC) began to proliferate its way into the monetary system as an alternative, decentralized means of holding and transferring value.

As Lee explained, the IRS’ efforts to build infrastructure to combat identity theft around 2011 preempted its effort to begin investigating crimes involving digital money:

“When cryptocurrency came into the picture, we were already thinking about digital crimes and money trails using Web2.”

However, the organization’s ability to understand, investigate and eventually prosecute and seize cryptocurrencies and digital assets became dependent on tools developed by private institutions.

The IRS-CI is one of hundreds of law enforcement and government agencies that make use of a specific suite of blockchain analysis tools that have been developed by Chainalysis. The company was established in 2014 and has become a lynchpin for blockchain-based investigations around the world over the past decade.

Data from Chainalysis' 2023 Crypto Crime report highlights the increase in the value of money laundering through cryptocurrencies over the past seven years. Source: Chainalysis 2023 Crypto Crime Report

For the IRS, the partnership with Chainalysis has become invaluable, with Lee stressing that his unit’s efforts to investigate crypto-related crimes would be near ‘impossible’ without the infrastructure and tools it now has access to. The public-private partnership with Chainalysis hinges on investing in technology that can help trace crypto and manipulate data from public blockchains to darknet marketplaces.

“Think about all the data that I have working for the IRS. It may not be the most, but it's the richest. Now I can take all this other data we have and then match it up against the records that I have. I mean, it's just incredibly powerful, but it takes time, energy and money.”

Even with the tools at its disposal, Lee admits that investigating crimes involving digital assets is a difficult undertaking. Investing in people, data and technology has been key in its efforts to combat crypto-related crime:

“When we're talking about the crypto space, the way I look at it is data and technology combined. It takes significant investment because you can't just get those results. You can't just seize $10 billion in value.”

While the market value of seized cryptocurrency in the IRS’ vaults has dropped in value from an estimated $10 billion at seizure, the institution still has to figure out how to safely hold billions of dollars of digital assets.

It’s a complex issue for the IRS-CI Chief, who highlights simple considerations for cryptocurrency custody which becomes increasingly stressful when dealing with huge sums of digitized value:

“Where do I store it? On chain or off chain? Do I keep it in my office? Do I lock up the seed phrases elsewhere? We're talking about a lot of money.”

The IRS-CI investigations have been fruitful, with the department frequently becoming the largest contributor to the U.S. Treasury asset forfeiture fund in recent years. The seizure of $3.6 billion involved in the 2016 Bitfinex hack is a prime example of the efforts of Lee’s unit to track down stolen funds.

Related: IRS reminds taxpayers of crypto income reporting ahead of 2022 filing

Another key part of the IRS CI’s mandate is sharing knowledge and skills to use tools like Chainalysis Reactor with local and international crime enforcement, which is chiefly aimed at powering financial crime investigations.

Part of Lee’s visit to Europe in May 2023 was to facilitate the training of over 60 different Ukrainian officials from a variety of law enforcement agencies. IRS-CI also donated Chainalysis Reactor licenses to Ukrainian law enforcement, which will help facilitate blockchain and cryptocurrency tracing amid the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian conflict.

Magazine: Best and worst countries for crypto taxes — plus crypto tax tips

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Crypto scammers feel the chill: Revenue drops 46% in 2022 — Chainalysis

Falling crypto prices caused crypto scam revenue to plummet in 2022, though two scam types managed to persist.

Crypto scam revenue was slashed by almost half in 2022 due mainly to falling crypto asset prices, but two scam types managed to stay immune.

Crypto scam revenue in 2022, which includes investment scams, NFT scams and romance scams, among others, amounted to $5.9 billion in the year — down 46% from 2021.

The data came from a Feb. 16 crime report from Chainalysis, which attributed most of the decline in scam revenue to poor market conditions — as lower crypto prices generally result in lower scam performance.

Yearly crypto scam revenues from 2017-2022. Source: Chainalysis.

Chainalysis however pointed to two different scam types that managed to stay relatively immune to the price falls — romance scams and giveaway scams.

"Scam revenue throughout the year tracks almost perfectly with Bitcoin’s price, consistently maintaining a three-week lag between price moves and changes in revenue. However, not every distinct type of scam follows this pattern — some types of scams see revenue changes increase as crypto asset prices decrease," explained the firm, adding: 

"For instance, unlike other kinds of scams, romance and giveaway scams don’t show a positive correlation with Bitcoin’s price."

Romance scams, while having lower overall revenue as a category, racked up the highest average victim deposit size in the year — with the average victim losing just under $16,000, nearly 3x more than the next biggest scam type. 

Average losses for victims throughout 2022 by scam type. Source: Chainalysis.

Romance scams typically involve building a relationship with the victim, with the scammer convincing them that they need their help.

Chainalysis said that these scam types are most likely to persist when crypto prices are down because it's playing to a victim's compassion rather than greed. 

"That kind of emotional pitch is probably equally effective regardless of trends in the wider market, because the victim’s primary goal isn’t to get rich quick, but rather to help someone they believe to be a potential romantic partner," the firm wro

Related: Scammers are targeting crypto users with new ‘zero value TransferFrom’ trick

Romance scams, and particularly "pig butchering scams" have been seen as a growing area of concern within crypto.

For example, a United Kingdom investigation published on Jan. 29 found that half of all crypto companies involved with scams in the state were linked to pig-butchering scams.

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Court to Try 2 Russians for Stealing 86 Bitcoins From Crypto Miner

Court to Try 2 Russians for Stealing 86 Bitcoins From Crypto MinerTwo residents of the Russian city of Tomsk will be tried for “large-scale robbery” involving the theft of cryptocurrency worth millions of rubles from a local miner. The digital coins were stolen from the owner at gunpoint, authorities said, adding that both criminals are now in custody. Thieves Face Trial in Russia for Armed Robbery […]

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

27,000 requests last year: Collaboration key for Binance’s Investigations team

Binance’s Investigations and Intelligence team plays a role in helping global law enforcement agencies identify and combat crypto-related crime.

Historical crime has left a proverbial black mark on the cryptocurrency ecosystem with multi-million dollar hacks, scams and fraud cases grabbing headlines around the world.

Various research reports have highlighted the use of cryptocurrencies for illicit means, with varying degrees of severity since Bitcoin’s inception in 2009. This has ebbed and flowed but crypto is still perceived by some as a means to launder money, finance terrorism and facilitate other serious crimes.

The prevalence of cryptocurrency-related crime inevitably led to the development of better tools and services to track and trace funds on different blockchains and cryptocurrency exchanges. Firms like CipherTrace, Chainalysis and Elliptic offer surveillance and analysis tools to businesses, while some of the biggest players have gone as far as establishing their own investigation and surveillance departments to identify illicit transfers on their platforms.

Binance is among them, with its exchange operating in several jurisdictions across the world. Its global footprint has demanded greater oversight of its operations which is carried out by Binance’s Investigations and Intelligence department.

Cointelegraph sat down for an interview with department head Nils Andersen-Röed and senior manager Jennifer Hicks during Web Summit in Lisbon to unpack the role their team plays within the organization and the greater cryptocurrency and crime enforcement space.

Industry experts

Both individuals have a wealth of experience in the sector. Andersen-Röed rose through the ranks of the Netherlands Politie and led its Dark Web Unit from 2016 to 2018. He then worked for Europol’s Specialist Dark Web Team for three years before joining Binance.

Hicks’ military background saw her serve as a cryptologic linguist for the United States Navy from 2010 to 2016. She later moved into specialized investigative work as a senior cybercrime investigator for Chainalysis from 2020 to 2021 as a precursor to her current role at Binance.

Cointelegraph’s Gareth Jenkinson alongside Binance’s Investigations and Intelligence senior manager Jennifer Hicks and department head Nils Andersen-Röed at Web Summit in Lisbon in November 2022.

Andersen-Röed oversees the European, Middle East and Africa region, with a mandate to handle a broad scope incorporating compliance processes. This includes transaction monitoring and storyboarding, as well as escalations on more serious issues:

“In my team, I’ve got former law enforcement agents, so we all used to work on crime cases ranging from ransomware to traditional cases with cryptocurrency elements in there.”

Hicks has a more specific directive across the global team, heading up the special investigations unit. Her team focuses on multinational and extremist-related crimes, tapping into her terrorist financing expertise:

“We’ll get requests from all over the world. It could be Europe, United States, anything that has extreme events that could be crypto related and not just Islamic terrorism.”

Hicks’ department has also addressed cases related to child abuse materials, violent crimes and incidents involving sanctions.

Busy workload

Binance, like many other exchanges, has a dedicated team that deals with general oversight requests and private information inquiries. More complex or urgent queries are allocated to specific departments.

The exchange’s global reach means that Andersen-Röed’s department is busy, usually processing requests in a few hours to three working days on average. It’s no mean feat, given the sheer amount of requests handled in 2021:

“The generic caseload is quite big. I think for the case team, for example, last year had like 27,000 requests which were handled in a very short time.”

This does not include what he describes as “proactive work.” This could include an instance of a hack, for example, where the team looks for exposure to Binance and investigates and takes action at an exchange level:

“If we see or if we notice certain law enforcement agencies in certain countries are interested in it, then we also reach out to them to see if we can work with them.”

Collaborative efforts

Binance’s Investigations team has also been involved in larger projects relating to fraud cases, terrorism financing and ransomware attacks, which Andersen-Röed described as top priorities for law enforcement agencies.

The transparent nature of blockchain networks also means that there is no shortage of work for Binance’s investigative team. This calls for a predefined scope in order to manage workloads and investigative efforts, given that some illicit movement of funds could eventually end up on Binance’s platform:

“If you see a hack, even if it doesn’t go to our platform, we can still trace it through blockchain. So, we quite often have to define up to what point we will investigate. It could be that a hack at some point will reach our platform or users will try to launder money, and then we can quickly take action.”

Binance’s Investigations team also has outside agencies approaching it for assistance. Hicks joked that the department receives requests “hourly” but the reality is that their expertise is sought after and influential.

Working through hundreds of law enforcement requests is a sizable task, but Hicks highlighted her team’s efforts to help guide and support investigations that might be outside of the exchange’s sphere of influence. This includes offering more than just information that has been requested, by collaborating on thought processes and analytical approaches:

“If we think that there’s a better avenue for them to get the answers that they need in their investigation, we’ll walk them through that. It’s really like a holistic process. It’s not really just standard field tracing and all that.”

Investigations are a two-way street as well. Binance relies on commercial tools and threat intelligence platforms to keep an eye out for crypto-related crimes and illicit movement of funds, as Hicks explained:

“The threat intelligence industry is chock full of great counterterrorism analysts that I used to work with in the past. So there is a network there that we rely on in order to gain a complete picture of whatever that investigation may be.”

A guiding hand

While the top global law enforcement agencies are well-versed in tackling cryptocurrency-related crime, Binance’s Investigations team also supports those that are still learning to deal with these types of crimes.

Andersen-Röed admitted that some countries and agencies are great at what they do, while others are still learning about the sector and lack the tools and expertise to tackle more complex tracing and crypto-related incidents:

“We also try to we do a lot of active outreach for law enforcement to basically explain what we’re doing but also how they can investigate. And it helps us because the quality of professional will improve.”

The pair’s Investigations team forms an important but smaller part of Binance’s compliance and security infrastructure. Some 500 people make up the department of the exchange that ensures its stability and security.

Nevertheless, the impact of the Investigations team can end up helping secure the wider cryptocurrency ecosystem by going one step further than just identifying and deactivating Binance accounts being used to move illicit funds.

Andersen-Röed stressed the importance of the reactive and proactive work in tracing cryptocurrency and flagging potential criminal elements:

“We try to take action against the accounts and reach out to law enforcement so they can investigate and hopefully arrest criminals. We try to keep our platform safe, but we also try to keep the industry safe.”

The cat-and-mouse nature of these efforts will likely continue, but Andersen-Röed believes his team’s efforts to make the industry safer will prevail in the long run. Collaboration and outreach remain an integral part of the exchange’s efforts to weed out nefarious players.

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Russia and Turkey to Collaborate on Combating Crime-Related Crypto Transactions

Russia and Turkey to Collaborate on Combating Crime-Related Crypto TransactionsLaw enforcement and judicial authorities from Russia and Turkey are joining forces in the fight against cybercrime, including the use of cryptocurrencies for illegal purposes. The collaboration has been agreed upon during a visit by Russia’s Prosecutor General to Ankara. Russia, Turkey Arrange Cooperation on Countering Crime Involving Digital Space and Assets The Prosecutor General […]

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets

Criminal use of crypto an ‘emerging threat’ — Australian police

Law enforcement will need to “continually evolve” in order to keep pace with criminals, Australia’s federal police said.

Australia’s federal law enforcement agency has highlighted the criminal use of cryptocurrency as an “emerging threat” in the country but says it’s a continuous challenge to keep up the pace with criminals. 

A spokesperson for the Australian Federal Police (AFP) told Cointelegraph that there has been an “increase in the number of offenders using cryptocurrencies to facilitate illicit business and attempting to conceal the ownership of assets,” noting:

“The criminal use of cryptocurrency is an emerging threat for law enforcement.”

However, they admitted the biggest challenge for law enforcement is to “continually evolve” their “tools, techniques and legal frameworks” to keep pace with criminals, particularly as mainstream adoption of cryptocurrency increases.

Last month, the AFP established a new cryptocurrency unit focused on monitoring crypto-related transactions.

However, the spokesperson said that despite the previous establishment of crypto-focused units, “criminals are continuing to find opportunities to avoid law enforcement and exploit the public.”

Misplaced focus? 

One Australian private investigator believes the AFP is yet to focus on the “prolific and profitable” crypto crime yet — online investment fraud.

IFW Global executive chairman Ken Gamble told Cointelegraph that most of the AFP’s focus recently has been on crypto money laundering relating to drug trafficking, cyber intrusion, ransomware, email compromise and hacking, but not “large-scale online investment fraud.”

Scamwatch data between January and July this year found that Australians had lost 242.5 million Australian dollars ($152.6 million) to scammers in 2022 already, with the majority of funds lost to investment scams, including romance baiting scams, classic Ponzi schemes and cryptocurrency scams.

The figure is already 36% higher than the that of the whole of 2021.

The investigator also believes that some law enforcement departments are still not fully equipped to handle crypto crime cases adding that “law enforcement agencies need better training and education on how cryptocurrency works.”

A report from analytics firm Chainalysis in July found that 74% of public agencies felt under-equipped to investigate cryptocurrency-related crime, with respondents indicating that many agencies did not use specialized blockchain analytical tools.

“There is a shortage of professional and certified cryptocurrency tracers rapidly involving the criminal industry,” said Gamble.

Related: Put your hands up! Interpol storms into the metaverse

This may be soon to change, with a number of international and national authorities announcing the establishment of crypto-crime-focused units this year.

Meanwhile, Interpol (International Criminal Police Organization) recently set up a special team in Singapore to help the government fight crimes involving virtual assets.

Interpol secretary Jürgen Stock stated at Interpol’s general assembly in India on the need for further training in crypto for law enforcement, saying cryptocurrency “poses a challenge,” as agencies are “not properly trained and properly equipped from the beginning.”

Russia Cautious on Tokenizing Real-World Assets