US Treasury Proposes New Regulation Against Crypto Mixers as a Whole

CryptoPotato

The U.S. Department of the Treasury has long taken a negative view of crypto mixing services, which it names CVCs (Convertible Virtual Currency Mixing Services).

Although there are perfectly legitimate uses of such services – primarily by privacy-focused customers who are simply willing to pay a fee in order to reduce the possibility of being tracked by blockchain analysis tools – it is also true that cybercriminals use them at an alarming rate.

The most well-known of these mixers is Tornado Cash, whose founders are facing charges in a Manhattan court that could lead to a 20-year prison sentence.

Primary Concern to U.S. Authorities

However, the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has now taken aim at crypto mixers as an entire class, seeking to outlaw them entirely.

According to a Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) submitted by FinCEN today, CVCs should be designated as a class of transactions of primary money laundering concern, building on their findings in cases such as the Bitzlato exchange takedown and the Axie Infinity Heist.

First Use of Patriot Act Against an Entire Class of Transactions

Andrea Gacki, FinCENs’ director, stated that the proposed NPRM aimed at crypto mixers would be the first use of Section 311 Authority against an entire class of transactions. Up until now, Section 311 had only been used against individual companies, banks, or countries, such as a private Andorran Bank, Bitzlato, Iran, and North Korea.

“CVC mixing offers a critical service that allows players in the ransomware eco, rogue state actors, and other criminals to fund their unlawful activities and obfuscate the flow of ill-gotten gains. This is FinCEN’s first ever use of the Section 311 authority to target a class of transactions of primary money laundering concern, and, just as with our efforts in the traditional financial , Treasury will work to identify and root out the illicit use and abuse of the CVC eco.”

Section 311 is a little-known part of the Patriot Act that gives the U.S. Department of Treasury the power to remove banking privileges from certain types of accounts, foreign jurisdictions, institutions, or classes of transactions, should its analysts believe that they are a “primary money laundering concern.”

Once Section 311 is applied to any of these, the targeted entity is essentially cut off from the global banking , significantly hindering its ability to survive financially.

免责声明:本页面信息可能来自第三方,不代表 Gate 的观点或意见。页面显示的内容仅供参考,不构成任何财务、投资或法律建议。Gate 对信息的准确性、完整性不作保证,对因使用本信息而产生的任何损失不承担责任。虚拟资产投资属高风险行为,价格波动剧烈,您可能损失全部投资本金。请充分了解相关风险,并根据自身财务状况和风险承受能力谨慎决策。具体内容详见声明
评论
0/400
暂无评论