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📅 July 3, 7:00 – July 9,
FinCEN Proposes Using Section 311 Against Crypto Mixers
The United States Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) revealed a new Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) for crypto mixers that it classifies as international Convertible Virtual Currency Mixing (CVC mixing). The agency believes that these mixers are a danger to financial stability and are used by terrorist groups to further their acts
As per a press release, FinCEN cited ‘crypto mixing’ as an area of “primary money laundering concern” and seeks to impose recordkeeping and reporting information on people involved in transactions. Interestingly, the public has been given 90 days to comment on the NPRM, and it is clear that the agency maintains a strictly negative stance on mixers
The Deputy Secretary of the US Treasury, Wally Adeyemo, stated that FinCEN and the Treasury are focused on “combatting the exploitation of Convertible Virtual Currency mixing by a broad range of illicit actors, including state-affiliated cyber actors, cyber criminals, and terrorist groups,” while adding:
Crypto mixers allow users to obfuscate their transaction details so that it is not easy to track their blockchain addresses, among other details. While these mixers have some positive use cases for privacy-focused individuals who do not want to be tracked down by blockchain analysis tools, they are mostly used by cybercriminals and hackers to launder proceeds from their illicit activities
FinCEN Director Andrea Gacki said that the proposed NPRM marks the first use of Section 311 authority against an entire class of transactions. Interestingly, Section 311 had only been used against individual companies, banks, or countries, such as a private Andorran Bank, Bitzlato, Iran, and North Korea, until now
Gacki noted that mixers allow “ransomware ecos, rogue state actors, and other criminals to fund their unlawful activities and obfuscate the flow of ill-gotten gains,” while adding:
As reported earlier by Bitnation, FinCEN branded crypto mixers as money-laundering hotspots, aiding terrorist groups. Recently, the Hamas group raised millions in cryptocurrencies in its war against Israel, and the agency believes mixers played a vital role.