Start your day with intelligence. Get The OODA Daily Pulse.
As reported by Aaron Schaffer at the Washington Post:
“The Biden administration debuted a new power yesterday for fighting Russian cybercrime and rolled out the first major public move of a new government team devoted to battling the illicit use of cryptocurrency. Both steps came as part of an international effort to punish Bitzlato, a cryptocurrency exchange that U.S. authorities say helped criminals profit from ransomware attacks and drug trafficking.
‘It is really evident that they are rolling out both — not only new soldiers but also new weapons — against crypto fraud or crime,’ John Melican, chief legal officer of the blockchain analysis firm Elliptic, MElcican [told the WP’s Schaffer].
Hong Kong-registered Bitzlato has received $2.5 billion in cryptocurrency since 2019, according to blockchain data firm Chainalysis. More than a quarter of it came from illicit sources, the company said.
“The biggest sources of illicit cryptocurrency sent to Bitzlato were addresses associated with crypto scams, dark net markets, and sanctioned entities such as the high-risk exchange Garantex, which was designated last year,” the company said in a blog post.
It’s the first public enforcement action led by the department’s national cryptocurrency enforcement team (NCET), which was announced in October 2021 and given a director in February 2022. When the Justice Department set up the team, ‘We said that NCET would investigate those who enable the use of digital assets to facilitate crime, with a particular focus on virtual currency exchanges and services,’ Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Polite Jr. said in prepared remarks at a Wednesday news conference.
It was also the first time the Treasury Department used more muscular authorities Congress gave it in 2020 to take on Russian money laundering. The agency’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) deemed Bitzlato a ‘primary money laundering concern,’ which under the fiscal 2021 defense authorization law allows Treasury to take extra steps against entities connected to Russian illicit finance. Those steps are similar to imposing sanctions, but they also have advantages for U.S. authorities:
The new power is focused on money laundering, and Keating said he had cryptocurrency fraud and ransomware in mind when he drafted the provision to update it in the fiscal 2022 defense authorization law.
“These are people that are just operating with impunity,” he said. ‘You really want to do some damage because otherwise, it’s whack-a-mole. You can go after an individual, and then another one will just pop up. But if you go after the money, you’re striking at the heart of things.'” (1)
https://oodaloop.com/archive/2022/05/23/is-the-conti-ransomware-gang-stronger-apart-then-together/
“The Treasury Department named Conti — a Russia-based ransomware gang that as of last January had reaped more than $150 million, according to the FBI — as one of the outfits that benefited from Bizlato’s services of facilitating illicit transactions.” (1)
The Conti Gang figures prominently in OODA Loop News Brief and original research posts.
The Global Crypto and Digital Currency Initiatives Series is our mechanism for tracking the global adoption rate of these technologies and platforms – and their long-term impact on the traditional global financial system. Moving forward, besides adoption rates, “crypto” (crypto exchanges, Defi, DAOs, etc.) will need to address:
In 2023, we will continue to track global adoption rates, but be on the lookout for posts – just like this one- as we surface further research and analysis of the “disintermediation” of the global financial system, crypto (write large) and blockchain cybersecurity, enhanced security measures – and the development of a regulatory environment of this space.
We also to continue to ‘silo’ a blockchain tracking effort – in the hopes of launching a series on cross-sector/industry sector blockchain initiatives that differentiate and delineate blockchain as separate from the crypto meltdown – and focus on “the long view” and the true promise of web3/blockchain and exponential innovation.
Finally, the most important filter we will be applying to this space in 2023 is regulation and overregulation as it relates to national security. OODA Loop CEO Matt Devost put a ‘stake in the ground’ on the subject in his post last year – Is Bitcoin a National Security Risk? – which expressed his general concern that overregulation of bitcoin would stifle American innovation and the strategic opportunities for advantage through the “future of money” and the underlying blockchain technology. The collapse of FTX since Matt’s initial post, unfortunately, will severely pivot regulators in the direction of something that either feels uncannily similar to or is a clear movement toward an environment of overregulation (which is also clearly having an effect on innovation). We will try to review and quant these impacts and outcomes as they emerge in 2023.
Also, various perspectives on “crypto’s threat to national security” have been voiced by the DOJ crypto chief, the CEO of Coinbase (‘crypto is up there with chips and 5G as a matter of ‘national security‘), and the Chair of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). And DARPA, of course, is on the scene with research efforts we took a look at back in November.
We will synthesize these perspectives relative to Matt’s initial concerns in the weeks and months ahead.
https://oodaloop.com/technology/2023/01/19/russian-cryptocurrency-owner-arrested-in-miami-for-allegedly-transmitting-over-700m-in-illicit-funds/
https://oodaloop.com/ooda-original/2022/05/10/costa-rica-in-a-state-of-emergency-is-conti-gang-cyber-attack-a-sphere-of-influence-shot-across-the-bow/
https://oodaloop.com/archive/2023/01/10/with-coinbase-investigation-and-100m-settlement-new-york-is-the-tip-of-the-crypto-regulatory-spear/