Chinese Police Arrest 1.1K People on Crypto-Related Money Laundering Charges
Chinese police have arrested over 1,000 people on money-laundering charges, alleging they used cryptocurrency to help them evade the law.
This is the fifth round of a nationwide crackdown on
money-laundering activities related to telecom fraud in China, dubbed
“Operation Card Breaking,” according to a statement released by the Ministry of
Public Security on its official WeChat account on Wednesday.
The most recent round is targeted at people that use
cryptocurrencies to assist money-laundering activities. The Chinese police have
arrested more than 1100 people and eliminated 170 criminal organizations.
Telecom criminals tend to use fake or stolen SIM cards and
compromised bank accounts to launder their money through the traditional
banking system. That has become difficult since the Chinese police started to
tighten surveillance on commercial banks and black markets for SIM cards and
bank accounts.
As fraudsters increasingly turn to cryptocurrencies to
launder their money, Chinese police have been cracking down on crypto-related
money-laundering crimes across 23 provinces and regions, including Beijing city
as well as Hebei and Shanxi provinces.
China continues crackdowns
The State Council called for a tough crackdown on telecom
fraud in October 2020. The Chinese police then started Operation Card Breaking.
It has arrested more than 311,000 people and eliminated 15,000 criminal
organizations.
Executives from two of the largest crypto exchanges that
provide services to Chinese investors were taken in by the Chinese police last
year to assist in undisclosed investigations. OKEx founder Star Xu and Huobi’s
chief operating officer Jiawei Zhu were under police’s custody for their
over-the-counter trading services that were potentially involved in money
laundering. Dong Zhao, one of the most prominent Chinese OTC traders, was also
taken in by the Chinese police later last year.
Comments
Post a Comment