While Voorhees understandably defended his firm with facts, no one can deny that criminals use cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin to launder money. For instance, darknet Silk Road was Bitcoin’s first credible use case. In another example, a youth illegally traded $750,000 via his bitcoin exchange service. In another one, a drug trafficking ring in Europe laundered $9.1 million through a Finland-based crypto trading company.
Contrasting Financial Crimes
On September 19, 2018, Denmark’s largest bank, Danske Bank, confirmed that its Estonian branch had illegally funneled $230 billion from Russia to Europe. That was 25,000 times more than what ShapeShift allegedly laundered. In fact, that was more significant than the combined market capitalization of cryptocurrencies at that time. Furthermore, there was a shocking revelation connecting a Danske’s financial crime with the death of a Russian lawyer named Sergei Magnitsky. As highlighted by Forbes journalist Frances Coppola, Danske was instrumental in hiding money embezzled by the Putin-led Russian government. That money also included $230 million tax revenue collected from Hermitage Capital Management.Banks Launder up to $2 Trillion a Year
Bloomberg recently created an highlighting the most substantial financial scams in the past decade. Atop Danske Bank, the list mentioned JP Morgan Chase, City Group, ING, HSBC, Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, Danske Bank, Standard Chartered, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, 1MDB and others. The list had nothing related to cryptocurrencies.Money laundering transactions are still as high as $2 trillion a year — Bloomberg (@business)Bloomberg added that banks were laundering up to $2 trillion every year. The statement came as a reminder to United Nations’ that dirty money transfers via conventional banking were between $800 billion to $2 trillion. Another report from Europol (download link ) had found that most money laundering was taking place via cash not cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to the EU agency, money does not leave a trail behind like bitcoin. It makes the digital currency less attractive to money launderers even though they keep experimenting with privacy-centric alternatives like Monero.
Law enforcement agencies over the years have effectively caught bitcoin criminals. In June 2018, the Spanish Guardia Civil and the Austrian Federal Police recovered $5 million worth of Bitcoins, IOTA and Lumens tokens from online drug peddlers. Blockchain forensic company like Blockchain Intelligence Group and Chainalysis aided agencies in cracking down crypto tax defaulters and money launderers. Moreover, Chainaylsis claimed that it had crucial information about 50% of the total Bitcoin transactions.
In contrast, agencies were less successful in cracking down significant monies, with saying that only 1% of criminal wealth was seized/frozen by 2011.