美国检察官宣布查获有史以来最大规模的加密货币,价值2.25亿美元。
US Attorney Announces Largest-Ever, $225 Million Cryptocurrency Seizure

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/us-attorney-announces-largest-ever-225-million-cryptocurrency-seizure

美国临时检察官珍妮·皮罗宣布查封超过2.253亿美元的加密货币,这是美国特勤局历史上最大规模的此类行动,与一个国际诈骗和洗钱网络有关。该网络与东南亚的犯罪组织和人口贩卖活动有关,通过在线投资骗局(通常被称为“杀猪盘”)诈骗了数百人。 受害者被诱骗投资虚假的加密货币平台,损失了巨额资金。其中一个案例涉及一位堪萨斯州银行的CEO,他挪用了4700万美元;另一位德克萨斯州居民损失了700万美元。犯罪分子使用了复杂的“剥皮链”和“链跳”等技术,通过众多加密货币交易账户和区块链来掩盖资金来源。 皮罗强调了这些诈骗的速度和规模,它们是在不受监管的环境中借助数字平台实施的。美国特勤局和联邦调查局利用区块链分析追踪了这个复杂的网络,该网络涉及超过26.3万笔交易,总金额达30亿美元的数字货币。当局的目标是将查封的资金返还给受骗的受害者。

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原文

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times,

Interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro said her office has seized more than $225.3 million in cryptocurrency linked to a sprawling international fraud and money laundering network responsible for defrauding hundreds of victims through online investment scams.

Pirro announced at a June 18 news conference in Washington that the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia has filed a civil forfeiture complaint in federal court.

The action targets the proceeds of a vast international fraud operation with ties to organized crime syndicates and human trafficking networks operating out of scam compounds in Southeast Asia.

The $225.3 million seizure, now in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service, is “the largest cryptocurrency seizure in U.S. Secret Service history,” according to Special Agent in Charge Shawn Bradstreet of the Secret Service’s San Francisco Field Office.

The U.S. Secret Service and FBI used blockchain analysis to trace a complex laundering network involving more than 144 cryptoexchange accounts, 263,000 transactions, and more than $3 billion in digital currency, according to the complaint.

Funds were routed through layers of intermediary “pass-through” accounts to obscure their origin, with evidence pointing to scam centers operated with trafficked labor.

The schemes—also known as “pig butchering” scams—typically involve criminals luring victims into sending funds for purported investments, often in the form of cryptocurrency, which turn out to be fraudulent.

One notable case cited in the complaint involved a Kansas bank CEO who was persuaded by scammers running a cryptocurrency confidence scheme to embezzle $47 million from the bank to invest in a fake crypto platform—through which the criminals then defrauded him of the embezzled funds.

In another case, a Texas victim lost $7 million after being persuaded to invest in a platform that he realized was fraudulent when he tried to withdraw his funds.

More than 430 individuals fell victim to the scams detailed in the complaint.

“This is about quick money,“ Pirro said. ”It’s about old crimes being committed in new ways. Every fast and loose criminal for centuries knows how it’s done, and they’ve done it over and over again, and they continue to do it today.”

Criminals begin by identifying targets—often on social media, through deceptive job postings or fraudulent investment pitches. They work to earn the victim’s trust, then exploit that trust to siphon funds under the guise of legitimate investment opportunities.

The perpetrators behind the scams often use techniques such as “peel chains”—in which crypto is broken into smaller amounts and passed through hundreds of wallets—and “chain hopping” to move assets across blockchains and currencies to mask their movement and origin, according to the complaint.

What sets today’s schemes apart, Pirro said, is the unprecedented speed and scale made possible by digital platforms and emerging technologies.

“So the hopeful investor now enters the Wild West on an international scale, where the crime is global, where there are no borders, and where the crypto criminals avoid the rules because this is an unregulated Wild West,” Pirro said.

Bradstreet said in a statement: “These scams prey on trust, often resulting in extreme financial hardship for the victims.

“The U.S. Secret Service, FBI, and our private partners worked diligently to trace these illicit transactions, identify victims, and seize these funds so that they can eventually be returned to their rightful owners.”

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