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US Indicts Two in $260M Bitcoin Heist and Laundering Scheme

US Indicts Two in 0M Bitcoin Heist and Laundering SchemeTwo individuals have been arrested for orchestrating a large-scale cryptocurrency heist, stealing over 4,100 bitcoins. Their complex laundering operation involved using multiple mixers and VPNs to cover their tracks. With the stolen funds, they lived lavishly, buying luxury cars and other high-end items. $230 Million Cryptocurrency Fraud Uncovered, Two Charged The U.S. Attorney’s Office for […]

Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

How law enforcement struggles with sophisticated crypto laundering

Advanced crypto laundering techniques continue to challenge law enforcement and crypto-related services, as highlighted in a new Chainalysis report on money laundering.

According to a report by Chainalysis, sophisticated money laundering techniques are presenting a significant challenge for law enforcement agencies and cryptocurrency service providers.

On July 11, the blockchain analysis firm Chainalysis released its “Money Laundering and Cryptocurrency Report,” highlighting the trend of billions flowing through the crypto ecosystem from illicit wallets to conversion services every month.

The report shows that these flows utilize advanced methods to obscure the origins and movement of these funds.

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Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

Federal Agents Crack Down on Drug Ring Using Crypto Mixers

Federal Agents Crack Down on Drug Ring Using Crypto MixersHolly Danielle Adams, 34, from California, has pleaded guilty to charges of drug distribution conspiracy and money laundering via cryptocurrency mixers. This case stems from an investigation by the Northern California Illicit Digital Economy (NCIDE) Task Force, a federal team dedicated to combating all forms of illegal dark web and cryptocurrency activities in the Eastern […]

Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

Tornado Cash Developer Alexey Pertsev Sentenced to Five Years and Four Months in Prison by Dutch Court

Tornado Cash Developer Alexey Pertsev Sentenced to Five Years and Four Months in Prison by Dutch Court

Tornado Cash developer Alexey Pertsev has been sentenced to 64 months in jail for laundering billions of dollars, according to a new Dutch court press release. The Netherlands’ Oost-Brabant district court handed down the sentence Tuesday for his involvement in creating the Ethereum (ETH)-based coin mixing system that helps users obfuscate their digital assets. Says […]

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Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

Anti-Crypto Mixer Blockchain Integrity Act Introduced in US House of Representatives

Anti-Crypto Mixer Blockchain Integrity Act Introduced in US House of RepresentativesThe Blockchain Integrity Act, a piece of legislation that seeks to put a 2-year moratorium on using cryptocurrency mixers, was introduced by U.S. Congressman Sean Casten on March 7 in the U.S. House of Representatives. Co-sponsored by Reps. Bill Foster, Brad Sherman, and Emanuel Cleaver, the bill proposes to conduct a study on the issue […]

Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

FinCEN Introduces New Rulemaking Proposal To Surveil Crypto Mixing Services, Citing Patriot Act

FinCEN Introduces New Rulemaking Proposal To Surveil Crypto Mixing Services, Citing Patriot Act

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has released a new proposal for the US government to begin monitoring crypto mixers. FinCEN cites Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT Act to propose requirements for financial institutions and financial agencies to keep records and reports on transactions that go through crypto or “convertible virtual currency” (CVC) mixers. […]

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Anonymity in Crypto Must End, Says Top US Regulator at CFTC – Here’s Why

Anonymity in Crypto Must End, Says Top US Regulator at CFTC – Here’s Why

A member of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is reportedly calling for the anonymity of crypto transactions to curtail illicit activity. According to a new Reuters report, CFTC commissioner Christy Goldsmith Romero says that tighter governmental and industry controls on digital assets are needed to curtail risks to national security. During remarks at […]

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Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

Push to ban ransomware payments following Australia’s biggest cyber attack

The attack on Latitude Financial is Australia’s biggest cyber attack with driver's license numbers, passports and financial documents among the stolen information.

The Australian government is being pushed to ban the payment of cyber ransoms, usually demanded in cryptocurrency, following a local business suffering a mass data breach and subsequent ransom demand.

Australian financial institution Latitude Financial first announced on March 16 that it was hit by a cyber attack and provided an update on April 11 indicating that it received a ransom demand that it's refusing to pay:

“In line with advice from cybercrime experts, Latitude strongly believes that paying a ransom will be detrimental to our customers and cause harm to the broader community by encouraging further criminal attacks.”

The attack resulted in around 7.9 million Australian and New Zealand driver's license numbers being stolen, in addition to 6.1 million customer records, 53,000 passport numbers, and 100 customer financial statements.

The Australian government’s lead cybersecurity agency, the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC), currently recommends that victims of ransomware attacks never pay a ransom saying there’s no guarantee the information will be returned instead of being sold online.

The ACSC’s tips on responding to a ransomware attack. Source: ACSC

Despite the recommendation, there is currently no law prohibiting firms from paying ransoms and the latest attack on Latitude prompted many from the Australian tech industry to call for new rules to outlaw it.

Wayne Tufek, the director of cybersecurity firm CyberRisk, noted in comments on April 11 to local media outlet The Australian that “making ransom payments illegal would act as a deterrent for criminals to continue attacks if they know that they won’t be paid large sums of money.”

The director of technology law firm Biztech Lawyers, Andrew Truswell, also told The Australian that a law restricting ransom payments should be considered.

Cyber Security Minister Clare O’Neil is currently weighing if ransom payments should be made illegal following suggestions from a review of Australia’s cybersecurity strategy led by Andy Penn, the former CEO of telco firm Telstra.

The ACSC suggests that Australia is particularly attractive to cybercriminals due to its prosperity, with Australians often cited as having the highest median wealth per adult in the world.

Cryptocurrency has long been accused of facilitating ransomware attacks, as attackers often demand payment in crypto in order to anonymize the funds and transfer them across borders.

One of the ways in which crypto facilitates ransomware is through its ability to anonymize funds through the use of mixing services such as Tornado Cash.

Related: Coinbase supports new court action to remove Tornado Cash ban

At a Feb. 28 United States Senate Banking Committee hearing a former deputy national security adviser for international economics in the Biden administration, Daleep Singh, suggested that “digital assets are essential to the business model of ransomware,” with “close to 100%” of cyber attackers paid off using crypto.

Hodler's Digest, April 2-8: BTC white paper hidden on macOS, Binance loses AUS license and DOGE news

Bitcoin counts down to $100K BTC price as shorts risk ‘violent breakout’

Into the storm: The murky world of cryptocurrency mixers

A handful of obfuscation protocols are competing for the user base of OFAC-sanctioned Tornado Cash.

Cryptocurrency mixing services are a divisive subject in the industry. Some advocate for the privacy-enabling features of these protocols while others maintain that they are mainly used for illicit means.

For platforms like Tornado Cash, the mainstream verdict is “guilty as charged.” The infamous decentralized mixing protocol was sanctioned by the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) in August 2022, essentially making it illegal for anyone to make use of the service.

Tornado Cash continues to be a contentious topic and one of its developers, Alexey Pertsev, controversially remains in detention in the Netherlands while investigators look to build a case against the Russian developer and his alleged role in the mixer’s operation.

In a proverbial sense, one man’s loss is another man’s gain and that seems to be the case for cryptocurrency mixers according to a report from blockchain analytics firm Elliptic.

A blow to money-laundering operations

As highlighted in its analysis, Elliptic reveals that over $7 billion worth of cryptocurrencies were processed by Tornado Cash. An estimated $1.54 billion of illicit cryptocurrency was laundered through the platform, with a user base that included the likes of North Korean Lazarus Group state hackers.

In the wake of OFAC’s sanctions, Tornado Cash liquidity pools saw their holdings drop by 60% which is said to have drastically reduced the anonymizing potential of the platform for large-scale money laundering operations.

With Tornado Cash ostensibly shut down, a number of alternative mixing services have been identified as potential threats to cryptocurrency service providers and criminal investigators. Elliptic highlights six different protocols that have been used as mixers in the wake of Tornado Cash’s prohibition.

Not all mixers are being used for illicit means

Elliptic’s report unpacks how these mixer protocols operate in different ways and provide a variety of outcomes for potential users. A top-down view shows that these obfuscation protocols have mixed over $41 million of cryptocurrency, which pales in comparison to the total amount that was processed by Tornado Cash.

Ether (ETH), BNB (BNB), Wrapped Ether (wETH) and Tether (USDT) are the most commonly mixed tokens, given their usability within decentralized finance (DeFi). Elliptic’s figures notably exclude Polygon-based tokens.

Two particular protocols account for the highest mixing capacity of the tools analyzed and as a result, make up three-quarters of the cryptocurrency mixed.

The first is Railgun, a decentralized protocol that, according to Elliptic, caters to professional traders and DeFi users looking to conceal investment strategies. Railgun Privacy System removes wallet addresses from transactions on public blockchains using zero-knowledge-proof technology. It claims to be ERC-20 token compatible and has no mixing limit.

Cyclone Protocol is the second protocol, a Tornado Cash fork that touts a number of enhancements said to include yield farming to contributors of anonymity pools. Elliptic reports that Cyclone is able to mix 100 ETH/100,000 USDT in one instance and is available on IoTEX, Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain and Polygon.

Aside from Cyclone, which Elliptic highlights as the highest risk protocol among the six in its report, funds being mixed by these services “largely reflect legitimate DeFi trading activity.”

Just $40,000 of mixed funds were traced back to DeFi thefts which suggests that current activity reflects a lack of adoption of these alternative mixing protocols by nefarious actors and criminal elements.

Keeping tabs

Despite the fact that a relatively small amount of cryptocurrency has been mixed by nefarious actors, Elliptic still provides a cautionary note aimed at a couple of the services it highlighted.

Cyclone Protocol is identified as the highest-risk service in the wake of Tornado Cash sanctions. The service’s high transaction limit, large liquidity available in its mixing pools, and its ability to process Tornado Cash’s eponymous governance token (TORN) are cause for concern according to Elliptic:

“It’s confirmed use to launder at least some proceeds of DeFi exploits, the large amount of funds it has since processed and the apparent absence of its developer team to address concerns only strengthen these risks.”

Buccaneer V3 (BV3) was scored as a “medium-high” risk tool. The Ethereum-based token (BUCC) allows users to “bury” funds for an indefinite period of time without having to mix, pool or cycle transactions. A decoy mode displays fictitious BUCC balances on user interfaces as an obfuscation technique.

The service could be attractive for illicit use cases as it makes use of a Gas Station Network in order to pay transaction fees by claiming a small proportion of transferred BUCC. This could allow users to avoid using regulation-compliant cryptocurrency exchanges and services:

“BV3 therefore claims that it solves the ‘funding problem’ — the issue that addresses typically need to source ETH to pay transaction fees, typically from a centralized KYC exchange.”

A caveat provided by Elliptic is that BV3 uses technology that is still being tested, with its features and capabilities still to be fully realized. The remaining four protocols all have factors that Elliptic believes will inhibit large-scale illicit use.

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Department of Justice Seizes $34,000,000 in Crypto From Florida Man Accused of Selling Stolen Data on Dark Web

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has seized tens of millions of dollars in crypto assets from an individual who allegedly sold illicit goods and laundered funds through the Dark Web. According to a new press release, the DOJ captured $34 million in digital assets from a Florida man in one of the largest cryptocurrency […]

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