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Government Crime The Almighty Buck United States

US Department of Justice Creates Cryptocurrency Enforcement Unit (theverge.com) 65

The US Department of Justice has created a team to investigate cryptocurrency-related crime. The Verge reports: The National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (NCET) will handle investigations of "crimes committed by virtual currency exchanges, mixing and tumbling services, and money laundering infrastructure actors," the agency said in a news release. Mixing and tumbling services can obscure the source of a cryptocurrency transaction, by mixing it with other funds. Cryptocurrency is "used in a wide variety of criminal activity," including ransomware demand payments, money laundering, and for the illegal sales of drugs, weapons, and malware, the agency noted. Several high-profile ransomware cases have involved demands in cryptocurrency, including the Colonial Pipeline attack in May, where the company reportedly paid a $5 million ransom to DarkSide.

The DOJ says the NCET, which will provide expertise in blockchain and cryptocurrency transactions for the Justice Department and other US government agencies, will draw team members from the DOJ's money laundering, intellectual property, and computer crimes divisions, as well as from US attorneys' offices across the country. The team will be under the supervision of Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Polite Jr. to start, but the Justice Department is seeking to hire someone who has "experience with complex criminal investigations and prosecutions, as well as the technology underpinning cryptocurrencies and the blockchain," on a more permanent basis.

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US Department of Justice Creates Cryptocurrency Enforcement Unit

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  • Let's see just how "anonymous" all those transactions really are.

    Pass the popcorn.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      They're not supposed to be anonymous; blockchain is all about transparency, and every transaction can be followed on the blockchain. Tying a wallet address to a person is not that hard for law enforcement unless the person manages to avoid ever using an exchange. That's why criminals have to use the aforementioned tumblers etc to try and anonymize their transactions.

      • Complete lack of privacy, even the most basic. Did you just buy a bible? Or Das Capital? Do you have a new mistress?

        Unfortunately, bad guys always find a way. Be it arms or financial opacity. After all, they specialize in illegal business.

      • It's anonymous in the sense that your real name and addresa are usually unknown. Have blatant open transactions then collect the actual cash from a tiny rural market in Pakistan, and the FBI is not going to be catching you very easily. There's a reason many criminals prefer bitcoin over cash, credit cards, money orders, and other forms of money transfer from their victims, and it's not because they're armchair economic enthusiasts.

    • Uh... they are not? Actually, you can backtrace every single transaction to its source, unless went through a money laundering, sorry, crypto tumbler, service.

      Outlaw that money laundering and you're done with the anonymity of bitcoins.

    • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

      Law enforcement in monetary transactions? What could go wrong? LOL.
      I bet they can't wait to claim civil asset forfeiture. We can show this Bitcoin is dirty. It was used for drugs. Then it was used for ransom. Then it was used in a "racist" manner somehow. Then like at airports and cash - just give us your pile of money. Cops that do that are no better than pirates and should be hung. So should the people above them telling them to seize people's money with absolutely no evidence whatsoever any crime was eve

  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Friday October 08, 2021 @07:09AM (#61871847)

    Not like banks are the biggest offenders when it comes to laundering money or anything

    https://fortune.com/2020/03/11... [fortune.com]
    https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]
    https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

    Don't worry citizen, Uncle Sam is on the case of Joe Blow buying some acid with bitcoin.

    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday October 08, 2021 @07:47AM (#61871907)

      "[...]And you know, in this country, now there are alot of people who want to expand the death penalty to include drug dealers. This is really stupid. Drug dealers aren't afraid to die. They're already killing each other every day on the streets by the hundreds. Drive-bys, gang shootings, they're not afraid to die. Death penalty doesn't mean anything unless you use it on people who are afraid to die. Like... the bankers who launder the drug money. The bankers, who launder, the drug money. Forget the dealers, you want to slow down that drug traffic, you got to start executing a few of these fucking bankers. White, middle class Republican bankers."

      --George Carlin

    • Take a look at the top BEP20 tokens by market cap and how many are under SEC investigation and compare that to normal banking. I get what you're saying, but it's a bit of an exaggeration.
    • I'm not sure what the point of your post is, apart from indulging in whataboutism.

      Crypto is a vehicle for billions of dollars of money laundering, and this unit is to investigate that, not 'Joe Blow buying acid'.

      The vast majority of a bank's business is legitimate, and when they facilitate laundering, they get heavily fined as the articles you cited state. Are you against this happening to crypto too?

      • I'm sure the people they go after will receive similar punishment as the banks /s

        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          If, on a relative basis, banks got anywhere close to what crypto exchanges are doing, they would be seeing some pretty stiff charges. People really seem to struggle with relative scale, at least selectivly.
    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      So.. you want something worse? How exactly does this circular ' you can not go after X until Y, you can not go after Y until X' resolve?
  • by rbgnr111 ( 324379 ) on Friday October 08, 2021 @08:30AM (#61872005)

    XXX is "used in a wide variety of criminal activity," including ransomware demand payments, money laundering, and for the illegal sales of drugs, weapons, and malware,

    it's not just crypto you can throw in just about any other currency here, including the US Dollar and that statement would be true.

    to me, this all just seems like it's one of two things

    1. All for show to look tough on financial crime
    2. a play to undermine crypto and eventually try to outlaw it or limit its use.

    • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Friday October 08, 2021 @08:46AM (#61872051)

      Low hanging fruit. Crypto doesn't offer the government interest free loans along with favors and lobbyists. After all, banks are Too Big To Fail. Organized crime launders millions of dollars? Jail time for decades or even life. Banks get a fine and told not to do that again *wink wink*.

    • The US dollar has significant noncriminal uses. It's also legal tender, so you can't just outlaw it without wrecking civilization. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies on the other hand are a shitshow: a failed experiment with barely any legal use and a host of societal problems. Both their use for criminal activity and governmental reaction to that were wholly predictable to everyone.

  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Friday October 08, 2021 @09:11AM (#61872117)
    Probably because they are all using their knowledge to trade illegally. The difference between illegal and legal is that some one has to prosecute for it to be illegal.
    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      They do have one. The DOJ fraud section's market integrity and major frauds unit prosecutes securities prosecutes insider trading and related crimes.
  • QUOTE: "seeking an individual with experience with complex criminal investigations" TIP: They are seeking scientists. Have the budget but not the capabilities. Someone must be beating them badly.
  • The biggest cryptocurrency concern today is Ransomware, yet this enforcement unit doesn't do much to stop it. They focus more on money laundering or fraud, but the victims of ransomware get no help.
    • by witz2 ( 8211674 )
      I even read in a news article that FBI sat on the keys for the kingdom for weeks to prepare a bigeee OP, letting ordinary folks pay up, but in the end the big OP was a failure. 3-letters agencies are disappointing people nowadays.
  • Give a call to Elon Musk to tweet something stupid about a currency or his dog?

  • ....they did something similar. Crypto is too wild for any serious pecunary use. I would take crypto more seriously as a currency after it's vetted by some big government institution. Crypto currencies are,
    • technology-wise: Very cool.
    • Financially-wise: Not so much.
    • by witz2 ( 8211674 )
      Its not that much wild. Can be used between brokers with instant currency conversion if you are worried about price volatility.

The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford

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