Operation Gulupa exposes Colombian cartels' crypto laundering

Authorities in Colombia and Spain have dismantled a major network used by drug cartels to launder millions through cryptocurrency. The two-and-a-half-year investigation, dubbed Operation Gulupa, targeted the Clan del Golfo and revealed sophisticated methods to hide illicit funds from cocaine sales. At least $46 million was laundered via digital wallets and shell companies across multiple countries.

The coordinated effort between Colombian and Spanish authorities, known as Operation Gulupa, has uncovered how powerful drug cartels like the Clan del Golfo have shifted to cryptocurrency for money laundering since late 2020. This marks the most significant crypto-related case in Colombia's justice system to date.

The probe began in 2021 following a Belgian raid on Sky ECC, an encrypted messaging service used by organized crime. Decrypted messages exposed four Colombians coordinating cocaine shipments to Europe. Investigators traced an 'invisible' network linked to Clan del Golfo, which trafficked drugs hidden in shipments of gulupa fruit—a purple-shelled delicacy—from Colombian and Ecuadorian ports. Shipments often paused in the Caribbean for repackaging before reaching Spain, Portugal, and Belgium. For a typical 200-kilogram load, the cartel received 25 billion pesos in payment.

Cash from European cocaine sales was collected by local intermediaries outside banking channels. In a parallel process, another intermediary in a different country delivered equivalent cryptocurrency to the sellers. To maintain appearances of legitimacy, the funds moved through exchange platforms in small, fragmented transactions across various wallets.

By 2022, the group had set up shell companies under the name B2Tech in six nations: Spain, Lithuania, the United States, Nicaragua, the Czech Republic, and El Salvador. In Colombia, it posed as an industrial cybersecurity firm. Authorities estimate at least 170 billion pesos—about $46 million—were laundered this way.

Key arrests include Pablo Felipe Prada Moriones, alias 'Black Jack,' and his brother Santiago, alias 'Marco,' detained by Spain's Civil Guard in Madrid and Ibiza. In Colombia, Jimmy Garcia Solarte, accused of transporting funds, and Brenda Yineth Pineda, representative of front companies, were apprehended.

This operation underscores a growing trend among groups like Clan del Golfo and FARC dissidents, who convert cash into crypto in lax jurisdictions, fragment it to obscure trails, and reintegrate it into the economy. Colombia saw over $40 billion in crypto transactions between 2023 and 2024, ranking it among Latin America's top five markets, according to the Financial Information and Analysis Unit.

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Dramatic illustration of Chinese Telegram-based crypto laundering networks handling $16.1 billion in illicit funds, per Chainalysis report.
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Chinese-language networks laundered $16.1 billion in crypto in 2025

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A new report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis reveals that Chinese-language money laundering networks processed $16.1 billion in illicit cryptocurrency funds last year, accounting for about 20% of all known crypto laundering activity. These Telegram-based operations have grown dramatically since 2020, outpacing other laundering channels by thousands of times. The findings highlight the networks' role in facilitating global crime while evading enforcement efforts.

Brazilian authorities have taken down Operation Kryptolaundry, targeting a major cryptocurrency money laundering network. The operation is linked to Glaidson Acácio dos Santos and involved laundering around $500 million.

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Following initial arrests reported last week, Spanish authorities have charged four more suspects in Denmark, fully dismantling a criminal network behind the April kidnapping and murder of a crypto holder near Málaga. The operation highlights rising 'wrench attacks' on digital asset owners.

브라질 당국은 중국과 강력한 PCC 범죄 신디케이트와 연계된 돈세탁 작전을 해체했으며, 불법 자금 1억9천만 달러가 관련됐다. 이 계획은 중국 전자상거래 플랫폼을 이용해 소비자 전자제품을 판매하면서 수익을 은폐하고 마약 수익을 세탁했다. 검찰은 이 네트워크가 세금을 회피하고 가짜 회사를 통해 돈을 이체했다고 주장한다.

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Jesús Gutiérrez Guzmán, cousin of Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán, was arrested in Madrid in 2012 following an elaborate FBI operation posing as Italian mafiosi. The mission, called Dark Waters, spanned three years and involved negotiations to expand the Sinaloa Cartel's cocaine trafficking to Europe. Gutiérrez, acting as the cartel's representative, fell into the trap that ended with the seizure of 346 kilos of drugs.

Troops from the 27th Brigade of the National Army destroyed 24 laboratories for processing coca base paste in Putumayo department during 2026. Operations seized materials and captured three individuals, impacting the narcotrafficking economy by 2,300 million pesos.

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A presumed fuel smuggling network, known as huachicol fiscal, operated within the Secretariat of the Navy involving at least 34 marines, according to a Federal Attorney General's Office investigation. The case emerged from an audio where Rear Admiral Fernando Guerrero Alcántar denounced the network to former Secretary Rafael Ojeda Durán, implicating his political nephews. The Attorney General's Office keeps the penal case open, despite the Navy finding no irregularities.

 

 

 

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