The US Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia released the below information:
The
Justice Department announced today a coordinated international takedown of
ChipMixer, a darknet cryptocurrency “mixing” service responsible for laundering
more than $3 billion worth of cryptocurrency, between 2017 and the present, in
furtherance of among other activities, ransomware, darknet market, fraud,
cryptocurrency heists and other hacking schemes. The operation involved
U.S. federal law enforcement’s court-authorized seizure of two domains that
directed users to the ChipMixer service and one Github account, as well as the
German Federal Criminal Police’s (the Bundeskriminalamt) seizure of the
ChipMixer back-end servers and more than $46 million in cryptocurrency
Coinciding with the ChipMixer takedown efforts, Minh Quốc
Nguyễn, 49, of Hanoi, Vietnam, was charged today in Philadelphia with money
laundering, operating an unlicensed money transmitting business and identity
theft, connected to the operation of ChipMixer.
“This morning, working with partners at home and abroad, the
Department of Justice disabled a prolific cryptocurrency mixers, which has
fueled ransomware attacks, state-sponsored crypto-heists and darknet purchases
across the globe,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco. “Today’s
coordinated operation reinforces our consistent message: we will use all of our
authorities to protect victims and take the fight to our adversaries.
Cybercrime seeks to exploit boundaries, but the Department of Justice’s network
of alliances transcends borders and enables disruption of the criminal activity
that jeopardizes our global cybersecurity.”
“Today's announcement demonstrates the FBI's commitment to
dismantling technical infrastructure that enables cyber criminals and
nation-state actors to illegally launder cryptocurrency funds,” said FBI Deputy
Director Paul Abbate. “We will not allow cyber criminals to hide behind
keyboards nor evade the consequences of their illegal actions. Countering cyber
crime requires the ultimate level of collaboration between and among all law
enforcement partners. The FBI will continue to elevate those partnerships and
leverage all available tools to identify, apprehend, and hold accountable these
bad actors and put an end to their illicit activity.”
According to court documents, ChipMixer – one of the most widely
used mixers to launder criminally derived funds – allowed customers to deposit
bitcoin, which ChipMixer then mixed with other ChipMixer users’ bitcoin,
commingling the funds in a way that made it difficult for law enforcement or
regulators to trace the transactions. As detailed in the complaint, ChipMixer
offered numerous features to enhance its criminal customers’ anonymity.
ChipMixer had a clearnet web domain but operated primarily as a Tor hidden
service, concealing the operating location of its servers to prevent seizure by
law enforcement. ChipMixer serviced many customers in the United States, but
did not register with the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and did not collect identifying information about
its customers.
As alleged in the complaint, ChipMixer attracted a significant
criminal clientele and became indispensable in obfuscating and laundering funds
from multiple criminal schemes. Between August 2017 and March 2023,
ChipMixer processed:
- $17
million in bitcoin for criminals connected to approximately 37 ransomware
strains, including Sodinokibi, Mamba and Suncrypt;
- Over
$700 million in bitcoin associated with wallets designated as stolen
funds, including those related to heists by North Korean cyber actors from
Axie Infinity’s Ronin Bridge and Harmony’s Horizon Bridge in 2022 and
2020, respectively;
- More
than $200 million in bitcoin associated either directly or through
intermediaries with darknet markets, including more than $60 million in
bitcoin processed on behalf of customers of Hydra Market, the largest and
longest running darknet market in the world until its April 2022 shutdown
by U.S. and German law enforcement;
- More
than $35 million in bitcoin associated either directly or through
intermediaries with “fraud shops,” which are used by criminals to buy and
sell stolen credit cards, hacked account credentials and data stolen
through network intrusions; and
- Bitcoin
used by the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU),
85th Main Special Service Center, military unit 26165 (aka APT 28) to
purchase infrastructure for the Drovorub malware, which was first
disclosed in a joint cybersecurity advisory released by the FBI and
National Security Agency in August 2020.
Beginning in and around August 2017, as alleged in the
complaint, Nguyễn created and operated the online infrastructure used by
ChipMixer and promoted ChipMixer’s services online. Nguyễn registered
domain names, procured hosting services and paid for the services used to run
ChipMixer through the use of identity theft, pseudonyms, and anonymous email
providers. In online posts, Nguyễn publicly derided efforts to curtail money
laundering, posting in reference to anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer
(KYC) legal requirements that “AML/KYC is a sellout to the banks and
governments,” advising customers “please do not use AML/KYC exchanges” and
instructing them how to use ChipMixer to evade reporting requirements.
“ChipMixer facilitated the laundering of cryptocurrency,
specifically Bitcoin, on a vast international scale, abetting nefarious actors
and criminals of all kinds in evading detection,” said U.S. Attorney
Jacqueline C. Romero for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. “Platforms like
ChipMixer, which are designed to conceal the sources and destinations of
staggering amounts of criminal proceeds, undermine the public’s confidence in
cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology. We thank all our partners at home
and abroad for their hard work in this case. Together, we cannot and will not
allow criminals’ exploitation of technology to threaten our national and
economic security.”
“Criminals have long sought to launder the proceeds of their
illegal activity through various means,” said Special Agent in Charge
Jacqueline Maguire of the FBI’s Philadelphia Field Office. “Technology has
changed the game, though, with a site like ChipMixer and facilitator like
Nguyen enabling bad actors to do so on a grand scale with ease. In response,
the FBI continues to evolve in the ways we ‘follow the money’ of illegal
enterprise, employing all the tools and techniques at our disposal and drawing
on our strong partnerships at home and around the globe. As a result, there’s
now one less option for criminals worldwide to launder their dirty money.”
“Together, with our international partners at HSI The Hague, we
are firmly committed to identifying and investigating cyber criminals who pose
a serious threat to our economic security by laundering billions of dollars’
worth of cryptocurrency under the misguided anonymity of the darknet,” said
Special Agent in Charge Scott Brown of Homeland Securities Investigations (HSI)
Arizona. “HSI Arizona could not be more proud to work alongside every agent
involved in this complex international case. We thank all our domestic and
international partners for their support.”
Nguyễn is charged with operating an unlicensed money
transmitting business, money laundering and identity theft. If convicted, he
faces a maximum penalty of 40 years in prison.
FBI, HSI Phoenix and HSI The Hague investigated the case.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania is prosecuting the case.
German law enforcement authorities took separate actions today
under its authorities. The FBI’s Legal Attaché in Germany, the HSI office in
The Hague, the HSI Cyber Crimes Center, the Justice Department’s Office of
International Affairs, National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team, EUROPOL, the
Polish Cyber Police (Centralnego Biura Zwalczania Cyberprzestępczości) and
Zurich State Police (Kantonspolizei Zürich) provided assistance in this case.
To report information about ChipMixer and its operators visit
rfj.tips/Duhsup.
A criminal complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
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