1. Home
  2. Interpol

Interpol

Interpol Issues Red Notice for ‘Coin Young Master’ Who Threw Cash From Rooftop

Interpol Issues Red Notice for ‘Coin Young Master’ Who Threw Cash From RooftopInterpol is aiding Hong Kong officials in locating Wong Ching-kit, a cryptocurrency promoter known as “Coin Young Master,” notorious for his 2018 stunt of tossing HK$6,000 from a rooftop. Wong faces charges of fraud and theft, including involvement in a HK$3 million cryptocurrency deception. An Interpol red notice has been issued to facilitate his arrest. […]

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Interpol Disrupts Scam Networks: 6,745 Bank Accounts Frozen, $2M Crypto Seized, 3,950 Arrested

Interpol Disrupts Scam Networks: 6,745 Bank Accounts Frozen, M Crypto Seized, 3,950 ArrestedInterpol’s Operation First Light, a global initiative involving 61 countries, has disrupted online scam networks by freezing 6,745 bank accounts and seizing assets worth $257 million, including $2 million in cryptocurrency. The operation targeted phishing, investment fraud, fake online shopping sites, romance, and impersonation scams, leading to the arrest of 3,950 suspects and identifying 14,643 […]

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Zimbabwean Millionaire Crypto Couple Rescued After Kidnapping by Individuals Posing as Interpol Officers

Zimbabwean Millionaire Crypto Couple Rescued After Kidnapping by Individuals Posing as Interpol OfficersA Zimbabwean millionaire couple, based in South Africa, has been kidnapped by a gang seeking to profit from their cryptocurrency valued at $13.9 million. The couple, Professor Sheperd Sikhosana and his wife, Sekayi Adelpha Sikhosana, were kidnapped in Pretoria, South Africa, and smuggled into Zimbabwe. The gang, led by Moses Nhachi Chademana and Liam Evans, […]

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Court Hands 11,196-Year Prison Sentence to CEO of Exchange That Collapsed With $2,000,000,000+ in Crypto: Report

Court Hands 11,196-Year Prison Sentence to CEO of Exchange That Collapsed With ,000,000,000+ in Crypto: Report

The chief executive of a collapsed crypto exchange has reportedly been handed a staggering prison sentence of over 11,000 years. According to a new report by Euronews, Faruk Özer, the CEO of Istanbul-based crypto exchange Thodex, has been given 11,196 years in jail for stealing $2 billion worth of crypto assets from customers. Thodex suddenly […]

The post Court Hands 11,196-Year Prison Sentence to CEO of Exchange That Collapsed With $2,000,000,000+ in Crypto: Report appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Five US enforcement agencies form new digital currency anti-crime task force

The agencies have worked together for years, but now their joint efforts are official as they plan to ramp up activity.

A diverse group of United States enforcement agencies has made official its cooperation on crimes related to the darknet and digital currency with the announcement of the Darknet Marketplace and Digital Currency Crimes Task Force on June 20. The new organization will target “cryptocurrency-enabled crimes” such as drug trafficking, money laundering, theft of personal information and child exploitation.

Representatives of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Arizona, the Office for U.S. Attorneys, the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Postal Inspection Service signed a memorandum of understanding on the new task force last week.

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

The agencies have been working together since 2017 and have seen a rise in the use of cryptocurrency in that time. According to a statement:

“The Darknet Marketplace and Digital Currency Crimes Task Force’s mission is to disrupt and dismantle criminal organizations that exploit the appearance of anonymity on the darknet or use digital currency to facilitate criminal activities.”

Law enforcement worldwide has been forming specialized units for crypto-related enforcement. Interpol created a crypto crimes unit late last year. Police in Canadian cities have begun forming local task forces. The new task force will have an international reach, as the HSI has 93 overseas locations in 56 countries.

In the U.S., the Federal Bureau of Investigation formed a Virtual Asset Exploitation Unit in February that will work with the Justice Department National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team. The Securities and Exchange Commission nearly doubled its Cyber Unit last year as well.

Law enforcement has a lot to work with. Chainalysis estimated last year that over 4,000 crypto whales hold illegally obtained funds, and crypto phishing attacks increased by 40% that year. However, there is also evidence that law enforcement efforts are paying off.

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

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Briton Wanted by US for Advising North Korea on Crypto Arrested in Russia

Briton Wanted by US for Advising North Korea on Crypto Arrested in RussiaA British national wanted with a red notice from Interpol for consulting North Korea on cryptocurrencies has been detained in Moscow. U.S. authorities allege that the man helped the regime in Pyongyang to bypass sanctions using digital assets. U.K. Citizen Sought by U.S. for Violating North Korea Sanctions Apprehended in a Moscow Hostel The Russian […]

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Brit who consulted North Korea on crypto reportedly detained in Moscow

Earlier, Christopher Emms was released by Saudi authorities due to the lack of evidence against him.

The Moscow bureau of Interpol detained a British national charged by the United States Department of Justice (DoJ). The man is accused of conspiring to violate U.S. sanctions on North Korea. 

According to local media, on Feb. 21, Christopher Emms was arrested in Moscow upon the “red notice” from Interpol. Th 31-year-old British citizen was detained in the hostel where he was staying.

In April 2022, alongside Spanish national Alejandro Cao De Benos, Emms allegedly provided instructions to North Korea on how it could use blockchain and cryptocurrency to launder money and evade sanctions. The two planned and organized the 2019 Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference.

The third participant in the conspiracy is Virgil Griffith, a former Ethereum developer. He was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in November 2019, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to 63 months in prison. Emms could face up to 20 years in prison for one count of conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Related: North Korea stole more crypto in 2022 than any other year

Radha Stirling, the founder of Due Process International, a nongovernmental organization that helps to defend human rights in the face of international enforcement agencies, previously claimed that there was no strong evidence against Emms:

“Precisely because he did nothing wrong; he provided no information to North Korea that doesn’t already appear on the first page of Google.”

In September 2022, Saudi Arabia rejected the American extradition request for the lack of a legal basis and released Emms after an eight-month travel ban. He immediately left the country and fled to Russia. However, despite the country being targeted by the DoJ’s efforts to enforce the financial sanctions in the crypto sector, the local officials decided to help their American counterparts. 

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Regulation comes for crypto staking: Law Decoded, Feb. 6–13

Even the SEC Commissioner has publicly rebuked her agency over the shutdown of Kraken’s crypto staking program.

Last week, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reached an agreement with cryptocurrency exchange Kraken. The latter will stop offering crypto staking services to American customers and pay $30 million in disgorgement, prejudgment interest and civil penalties. 

While the sum of fines could hardly get an entity like Kraken off balance, the future of staking concerns the crypto market. The court agreement attracted the ire of not only the general crypto community but of investors, politicians and industry executives, with Cinneamhain Ventures partner Adam Cochran calling SEC Chair Gary Gensler “an agent of an anti-crypto agenda” rather than a regulator. The CEO of the Blockchain Association, Kristin Smith, urged Congress to take such important cases under its direct control.

The CEO and co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, Brian Armstrong, believes that banning retail crypto staking in the United States would be a “terrible” move by the country’s regulators. Armstrong also criticized the current lack of regulatory clarity in the U.S. and subsequent “regulation by enforcement” that he says is driving companies offshore, such as FTX.

Even the SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce has publicly rebuked her agency over the shutdown of Kraken’s crypto staking program. The commissioner blasted her agency, arguing that regulation by enforcement “is not an efficient or fair way of regulating” an emerging industry. Peirce implied the regulator was “lazy and paternalistic,” suggesting the SEC should have initiated a “public process to develop a workable registration process that provides valuable information to investors.”

South Korean regulator provides guidance on security tokens

South Korea established guidance that specifies which digital assets will be considered and regulated as securities in the country. The law considers securities as financial investments where investors are not required to make additional payments after their original investment. The Financial Services Commission (FSC) also provided examples of which digital assets will most likely be classified as securities. According to the FSC, this may include tokens that provide a stake in business operations, gives holders rights to dividends or residual assets, or provide profit to the investors.

Continue reading

Dubai releases crypto regulations for virtual asset service providers

The Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA), the regulator in charge of overseeing cryptocurrency laws within Dubai, has issued new guidelines for virtual asset service providers (VASPs) operating within the emirate. All market participants, whether licensed by VARA or not, must adhere to marketing, advertising and promotions regulations. Violators will be fined between $5,500 (20,000 dirhams) and $55,000 (200,000 dirhams), and repeat offenders could see fines as high as $135,000 (500,000 dirhams). However, the rules only apply to market participants within Dubai, excluding those operating under the Dubai International Financial Centre.

Continue reading

Interpol wants to police metaverse crimes

The International Criminal Police Organization, or Interpol, is investigating how it could police crimes in the metaverse. According to Interpol secretary general Jurgen Stock, as the number of metaverse users grows and the technology further develops, the list of possible crimes will only expand to potentially include crimes against children, data theft, money laundering, financial fraud, counterfeiting, ransomware, phishing, and sexual assault and harassment. The move to police the metaverse comes nearly four months after Interpol launched its own metaverse in October 2022 at the 90th Interpol General Assembly in New Delhi, India.

Continue reading

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Russia Releases Bitzlato Co-Founder Anton Shkurenko After Questioning

Russia Releases Bitzlato Co-Founder Anton Shkurenko After QuestioningRussian authorities have released the recently arrested co-founder of crypto exchange Bitzlato, said to have processed illicit funds worth millions of U.S. dollars. Anton Shkurenko, who was questioned in Moscow, denies the French charges against him that became the reason for his brief detention. Shkurenko Says Potential Case Against Him in Russia Won’t Interfere With […]

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?

Bitzlato co-founder released from brief arrest and questioning: Report

The co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Bitzlato was briefly detained for questioning in Moscow at the request of Interpol, after which he was released.

Local Russian media outlets reported on Monday that Bitzlato co-founder Anton Shkurenko was detained in Moscow on Feb. 6 at the request of Interpol. However, according to a Feb. 10 report from CoinDesk, Shkurenko was stopped and detained by the local police for an identity check, then promptly let go after a conversation.

Shkurenko said he is not involved in any criminal cases in Russia, while not disclosing details of the investigation:

“I hope I convinced the prosecutor of my innocence.”

He did not specify the sector of law enforcement that detained him, though he mentioned he signed a contract to appear when and if requested by investigators. Shkurenko, therefore, received a no-detention warrant to skirt future arrests.

At the time of arrest, Shkurenko attests that he is a “tech consultant” for Bitzlato. However, he reportedly held the keys for the exchange’s crypto wallets, though they have since been handed over to other team members.

Bitzlato still has around 100 active employees despite the recent crackdowns from global authorities. Shkurenko told CoinDesk that a relaunch of the exchange, with a base in Russia, could happen in the near future. 

“I could launch the exchange from my apartment.“

According to the co-founder, the team has held onto the majority of its users’ funds. Shkurenko said he could “quickly” resume operations.

Related: Cleaning up crypto: How much enforcement is too much?

This comes on the heels of a series of updates involving Bitzlato’s operational status. On Jan. 18, authorities in the United States took action against the exchange with accusations of money laundering and allegedly bypassing sanctions against Russia.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the exchange handled nearly $700 million of illicit funds. 

As the investigation against the exchange continues, various prominent companies in the crypto space have been called out for connections with Bitzlato. One is Binance, named by the U.S. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network a major receiver of Bitcoin (BTC) from the exchange.

LocalBitcoins, another cryptocurrency platform, shut down on Feb. 9 and was also linked to Bitzlato as a big sender of BTC. 

On Jan 23. Europol reported that it seized $19.5 million in crypto in an enforcement action against Bitzlato. A little over a week later, on Feb. 2, Spanish authorities detained the exchange’s CEO.

Gensler’s Anticipated Exit Raises Questions: Who Will Lead the SEC Next?