DOJ probes Binance over alleged Iran-linked crypto flows

The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating the cryptocurrency exchange Binance for its alleged role in Iran-linked transactions that may have evaded sanctions. This probe comes less than three years after Binance's $4.3 billion settlement with U.S. authorities in 2023 for sanctions and anti-money-laundering violations. Binance denies any wrongdoing, stating its internal reviews found no sanctions breaches.

The Justice Department has reopened scrutiny on Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, focusing on its potential facilitation of transactions tied to Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions. This development follows Binance's guilty plea in November 2023, when it admitted to failures in complying with sanctions and anti-money-laundering laws, resulting in penalties exceeding $4.3 billion and the appointment of a U.S. monitor. Founder Changpeng Zhao received a pardon, but the exchange now faces questions about the effectiveness of its post-settlement compliance measures.

Reports from the Wall Street Journal indicate that Binance's internal investigators had flagged suspicious activities, including more than $1 billion linked to an entity called Blessed Trust and approximately $1.7 billion in overall suspect transfers. One account was reportedly labeled as internal, prompting concerns over how intermediary accounts and controls were managed for Iranian entities and proxies. Binance contests these claims, asserting that its reviews identified no sanctions violations, that implicated entities were investigated and removed from the platform, and that no direct transactions occurred with Iran-based users.

In response to media coverage, Binance has filed a defamation lawsuit. The exchange reports significant improvements in risk management, with exposure to illicit wallets dropping nearly 97% from early 2024 to mid-2025, including a 97.3% reduction in connections to major Iranian crypto exchanges.

This case unfolds amid broader U.S. efforts to curb crypto's role in sanctions evasion. On January 30, the Treasury Department sanctioned UK-registered exchanges Zedcex and Zedxion for processing over $94 billion in transactions linked to Iran. Senator Richard Blumenthal launched an inquiry on February 24, referencing the $1.7 billion in transfers, Blessed Trust, Hexa Whale, and about 2,000 associated accounts. Senate Banking Democrats urged Treasury and DOJ investigations on February 27.

Binance's scale amplifies the stakes: it had 300 million registered accounts by December 2025, handled over $20 billion in daily spot volume, and commanded 38.3% of centralized exchange spot activity that month, with $361.8 billion in monthly volume. Current market data shows Bitcoin at $69,909 and BNB at $643, with no immediate signs of panic but potential for shifts in user confidence.

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Illustration of CoinEx denying crypto transactions with sanctioned Iranian entities, showing blockchain flows and denial stamps.
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CoinEx denies knowledge of $3.84 billion flows to sanctioned Iranian entities

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Blockchain analytics firm TRM Labs reported that CoinEx facilitated more than $3.84 billion in crypto transactions with over 60 sanctioned Iranian platforms over seven years. CoinEx rejected the claims and stated it has begun exiting Iran-related business.

Binance has denied a Wall Street Journal report alleging that the exchange processed $850 million in crypto transactions for a sanctioned Iranian financier linked to the IRGC.

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Binance founder Changpeng Zhao shared his vision for strengthening the U.S. crypto market in recent interviews with CoinDesk. He outlined goals for Binance.US and discussed factors behind the current market conditions.

Binance has announced it will suspend Peer-to-Peer (P2P) trading services involving the Ethiopian Birr from May 15, 2026. The decision follows pressure from Ethiopian financial regulators. This comes two months after the National Bank of Ethiopia warned that Birr-paired crypto trades are illegal.

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Greece’s regulator is preparing to reject Binance’s license application under the EU’s MiCA rules just days before the July 1 deadline. The exchange is now exploring an alternative route through France. Tether’s USDT has already been removed from several licensed EU platforms.

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