Posted on Saturday, June 1st, 2024 at 9:00 am
People often give cryptocurrency a bad rap, but they don’t always use it for nefarious purposes. At Bruno Law Offices, our premier criminal defense team serving the Central Illinois area wants to help you understand the legal implications of cryptocurrency in money laundering schemes.
What Is Cryptocurrency?
The technological age has brought us a new type of currency called cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency is a form of decentralized, digital money. The most popular forms of cryptocurrency are Bitcoin and Ethereum, but individuals can purchase all sorts of cryptocurrency, such as Dogecoin, Solana, and Shiba Inu.
As a decentralized currency, cryptocurrency lacks management or backing from a central authority to maintain or stabilize its value. Blockchain technology underpins cryptocurrency, meaning it records transactions in “blocks” linked together by a chain of previous transactions.
How Is Cryptocurrency Used for Money Laundering?
Cryptocurrency is popular in money laundering schemes. As the United Nations points out, cryptocurrencies are anonymous at their point of creation. You can quickly and easily create an account and instantly transfer crypto elsewhere. Many scammers use cryptocurrency in money laundering to create large-scale schemes that can manage thousands of transfers, quickly and efficiently concealing the original source of the money. The process becomes even easier because most cryptocurrencies are decentralized and unregulated.
Some of the most common money laundering crypto schemes in use include:
- Offshore transactions to obscure the illegal origin of money
- Smurfing involves splitting large sums of money into smaller amounts and sending them through multiple crypto transactions.
- Mixing is when services are used to hide the transaction history of a cryptocurrency
- Exchange hopping occurs when individuals use multiple crypto exchanges to transfer launder funds across numerous platforms, making it almost impossible to trace
The methods for using cryptocurrency in money laundering schemes can change almost as fast as technology, meaning there are an ever-growing number of ways that parties can use crypto to launder money.
What Is AML?
Governments worldwide are slowly coming to understand how money laundering in the cryptocurrency space affects both fiat currency and cryptocurrency markets. To help combat potential criminal activity, some regulatory agencies are enacting anti-money laundering legislation or AML. AML policies aim to stop criminal entities from unlawfully obtaining crypto into cash.
Unfortunately, the global nature of crypto transactions complicates establishing uniform AML requirements across jurisdictions with wildly different laws and regulations. The foundation of cryptocurrency rests on privacy and anonymity. Those using peer-to-peer transactions in moving funds have a certain level of privacy and can bypass know-your-customer (KYC) requirements used by banks and other centralized financial institutions. KYC guidelines require financial professionals to verify a customer’s identity and evaluate the risks of maintaining a relationship with that customer.
Many in the financial space suggest that crypto operators adopt and implement KYC regulations to ensure that individuals comply with state, federal, and global regulations and combat money laundering and illegal activity. Regulators could more easily identify red flags associated with specific types of crypto transactions. AI could potentially help implement money laundering detection tools and deter criminal activity.
While some exchanges have moved toward KYC measures, others say it goes against the original purpose of cryptocurrency. These non-compliant exchanges continue to remain targets for illegal activity and money laundering.
Cryptocurrency in Illinois and Legal Implications of Cryptocurrency in Money Laundering
Illinois has joined other jurisdictions in adopting the Uniform Regulation of Virtual Currency Business Act (URVCBA). The URVCBA helps give states a regulatory framework for companies that want to engage in virtual currency business activity. At the federal level, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission monitor and regulate financial activity in the cryptocurrency industry.
Businesses in Illinois can accept payments in cryptocurrency. However, these businesses must comply with all state and federal regulations involving money transmission and anti-money laundering statutes. Individuals in the state charged with money laundering involving crypto can face significant legal implications like fines and prison time. Money laundering offenses are felonies and, depending on the value of the money laundered, can result in steep fines and prison time.
Contact an Experienced Illinois Criminal Defense Team Today
Dabbling in cryptocurrency can be exhilarating. Find yourself on the wrong side of a money laundering scheme, and you can face life-changing legal consequences. If you’re facing charges for money laundering or cryptocurrency offenses, hire a skilled Illinois white-collar crimes defense attorney immediately. The attorneys in our law firm have the legal knowledge and proven track record to assist and help you with your case.
Call our office at (217) 328-6000 or contact us online to arrange a confidential legal consultation.
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