China's supreme court pledges harsher penalties for crypto crimes

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.

On March 9, Chief Justice Zhang Jun presented the Supreme People's Court's annual work report to the National People's Congress, highlighting a commitment to harsher penalties for individuals and organizations involved in cryptocurrency-related financial crimes. According to local media outlet Sina Finance, the court aims to target those using virtual currencies to launder money or illegally transfer funds across borders, amid efforts to enforce China's strict capital controls that limit individuals to $50,000 annually for outbound transfers.

This warning forms part of a broader initiative against abuses involving emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence-powered fraud and "human flesh search" doxxing attacks, where internet users collaborate to expose private information. The report emphasized that while China supports technological innovation, such applications "must comply with legal boundaries." Courts are instructed to "accurately grasp the ‘error tolerance’ space for technological innovation while promoting the standardised development of artificial intelligence."

Enforcement has ramped up since Beijing's 2021 ban on crypto trading and mining, yet criminals continue to exploit virtual currencies to move funds offshore. A January 2026 report from Chainalysis indicated that Chinese-language money-laundering networks handled about 20% of all illicit crypto funds over the previous five years. Beijing's zero-tolerance stance underscores its reticence toward cryptocurrencies in general, signaling continued regulatory pressure on such activities.

相关文章

香港2025年录得的科技罪案数字下跌6.9%,然而黑客攻击造成的损失却增加逾一倍,达到6,260万港元。警方将这一升幅归因于针对金融机构及加密货币平台的巨额攻击。

由 AI 报道

Japan’s Lower House has passed legislation that would treat cryptocurrencies as financial instruments under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act. The move shifts oversight from the Payment Services Act and sets the stage for lower taxes and crypto ETFs. The rules are expected to take effect in 2027.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝