The Federal Bureau of Investigation is aggressively and swiftly ramping up efforts to crack down on the illicit use of cryptocurrencies in a wide variety of criminal activities. A recent FBI forfeiture notice on August 21 details numerous seizures totaling 195 cases of major cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) across multiple states and jurisdictions.
Forfeiture is a legal process that allows the government to confiscate property involved in a crime so that criminals cannot profit from it. The FBI has invoked this process 195 times specifically for virtual currency seizures, demonstrating extensive tracking of cryptocurrencies. These virtual currencies have often been seized along with cash, vehicles, weapons, drugs and other contraband in lawsuits involving drug proceeds, fraud, money laundering and more.
Specifically, the FBI conducted at least 39 virtual currency seizures in California, 35 in Florida, 25 in Texas, 20 in New York and 19 in Virginia. The varieties of cryptocurrencies include Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Tether (USDT), Cardano (ADA), Polkadot (DOT) and others, which display advanced tracking on various blockchain platforms.
The amounts of cryptocurrency seized in each case varied widely, ranging from just 0.0005 Bitcoin worth just $11.40 to over 100,000 Tether worth $110,572. In each case, the total dollar value of the virtual currency seizures ranged from just a few hundred dollars to as much as $469,076 per case. The frequent seizure of cryptocurrencies alongside drugs, cash, weapons and other contraband points to the integration of cryptocurrency into existing criminal ecosystems as an alternative payment mechanism that is considered anonymous and untraceable.
The FBI created a dedicated cryptocurrency tracking unit in 2015, allowing agents to track the flow of cryptocurrencies linked to drugs, fraud, weapons, extortion, and a host of other crimes through the blockchain. FBI Director Christopher Wray stated in 2021 that monitoring and addressing illicit use of cryptocurrency was a top priority for the agency. These 195 virtual currency forfeitures covered in the August notice speak to the FBI’s ability to track down and seize crypto funds.
The wide geographic spread shows coordinated efforts between FBI field offices, federal prosecutors and cryptocurrency exchanges. While the seizures represent a fraction of illicit crypto, they have increased in frequency as Bitcoin and other digital assets become more popular. According to the 2022 FBI Crime Report, complaints about cryptocurrency scams increased by 65% compared to 2021.
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