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

Chainalysis released its 2026 Crypto Crime Report on January 27, detailing the rise of Chinese-language money laundering networks (CMLNs). In 2025, these networks handled $16.1 billion in inflows—roughly $44 million per day—across more than 1,799 active wallets. This represents a surge from $10 billion in total on-chain laundering in 2020 to $82 billion in 2025, with CMLNs capturing 20% of the activity.

The report identifies six key service types within the CMLN ecosystem: running point brokers, which recruit individuals to rent bank accounts for initial fund placement; money mule motorcades for layering funds through networks of accounts; informal OTC services offering KYC-free transfers; Black U services selling tainted crypto at 10-20% discounts; gambling platforms for high-volume transactions; and money movement services providing mixing and swapping. Guarantee platforms like Huione and Xinbi act as central hubs, offering escrow and marketing, though they do not control the laundering itself.

Growth has been explosive: inflows to CMLNs expanded 7,325 times faster than to centralized exchanges since 2020. On-chain patterns mirror traditional laundering phases—placement, layering, and integration—with Black U services fragmenting large sums to evade detection, clearing very large transactions in just 1.6 minutes on average in Q4 2025.

Experts attribute this to China's capital controls, which drive wealthy individuals to seek evasion routes, fueling transnational crime. Tom Keatinge, director at the Centre for Finance & Security at RUSI, said, “Very rapidly, these networks have developed into multi-billion dollar cross-border operations offering efficient, value-for-money laundering services.” Chris Urben of Nardello & Co noted crypto's efficiency over traditional systems, allowing billions to be moved via cold wallets.

Regulatory actions include U.S. Treasury sanctions on the Prince Group and FinCEN's designation of Huione as a primary money laundering concern. However, vendors migrate to alternative platforms, underscoring the need for public-private collaboration to target operators directly.

Watu wanasema nini

X discussions focus on Chainalysis' 2026 Crypto Crime Report preview, noting Chinese-language networks laundered $16.1 billion in illicit crypto in 2025, equating to $44 million daily across nearly 1,800 wallets and 20% of global activity. Sentiments include alarm at the scale of organized crime, concerns over reputational damage to crypto and calls for regulation, defenses citing growth in adoption outpacing crime stats, and praise for analytics aiding enforcement and victims.

Makala yanayohusiana

U.S. Treasury report illustration showing holographic tech pillars for crypto compliance: AI monitoring, digital ID, blockchain analytics, and data APIs, with privacy mixer endorsement.
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U.S. Treasury report proposes AI, digital ID pillars for crypto compliance; endorses lawful mixer privacy

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The U.S. Treasury Department submitted a report to Congress on March 9, 2026—commissioned under the GENIUS Act—outlining four technological pillars to enhance transparency in cryptocurrency transactions: artificial intelligence for monitoring, digital identity for onboarding, blockchain analytics for tracing, and interoperable data-sharing APIs. It describes digital assets as key to U.S. innovation leadership while acknowledging lawful users' need for privacy tools like mixers on public blockchains, amid risks from illicit exploitation.

China's Supreme People's Court has warned of stricter penalties for using cryptocurrencies to launder money and evade capital controls. Chief Justice Zhang Jun made the statement in the court's annual report to the National People's Congress on March 9. The move reflects Beijing's ongoing crackdown on technology-enabled financial crimes.

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The Financial Action Task Force has issued a report highlighting stablecoins as the primary vehicle for illicit cryptocurrency transactions, accounting for the majority of suspicious volumes in recent years. The watchdog points to their use by actors in sanctioned countries like Iran and North Korea for sanctions evasion and money laundering. It calls for enhanced regulatory measures to address these risks.

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