Crypto crime hits record $20bn in 2022 | The Business Standard
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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2025
Crypto crime hits record $20bn in 2022

Tech

Reuters
14 January, 2023, 10:25 am
Last modified: 14 January, 2023, 10:28 am

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Crypto crime hits record $20bn in 2022

Even as overall crypto transaction volumes fell, the value of crypto transactions related to illicit activity rose for the second year running

Reuters
14 January, 2023, 10:25 am
Last modified: 14 January, 2023, 10:28 am
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters

Illicit use of cryptocurrencies hit a record $20.1 billion last year as transactions involving companies targeted by US sanctions skyrocketed, data from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis showed on Thursday.

The cryptocurrency market floundered in 2022, as risk appetite diminished and various crypto firms collapsed. Investors were left with large losses and regulators stepped up calls for more consumer protection.

Even as overall crypto transaction volumes fell, the value of crypto transactions related to illicit activity rose for the second year running, Chainalysis said. Transactions associated with sanctioned entities increased more than 100,000-fold in 2022 and made up 44% of last year's illicit activity.

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Funds received by the Russian exchange Garantex, which was sanctioned by the US Treasury Department in April, accounted for "much of 2022's illicit volume", Chainalysis said, adding that most of that activity is "likely Russian users using a Russian exchange." 

The United States also imposed sanctions last year on cryptocurrency mixing services Blender and Tornado Cash, which it said were being used by hackers, including from North Korea, to launder billions of dollars worth of proceeds from their cyber crimes.

The volume of stolen crypto funds rose 7% last year, but other illicit crypto transactions including those related to scams, ransomware, terrorism financing and human trafficking, saw volumes fall.

Chainalysis said its $20.1 billion estimate only includes activity recorded on blockchain, and excludes "off-chain" crime such as fraudulent accounting by crypto firms.

The figure also excludes when cryptocurrencies are the proceeds of non-crypto-related crimes, such as when cryptocurrency is used as a means of payment in drug trafficking, Chainalysis said.

cryptocurrency

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