The post DOJ Emails show Coinbase founder tried to meet with Epstein to finalize his investment pledge appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The U.S. Treasury DepartmentThe post DOJ Emails show Coinbase founder tried to meet with Epstein to finalize his investment pledge appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The U.S. Treasury Department

DOJ Emails show Coinbase founder tried to meet with Epstein to finalize his investment pledge

4 min read

The U.S. Treasury Department is investigating if cryptocurrency platforms have enabled Iran officials to evade Western-imposed sanctions, Ari Redbord, global head of policy at blockchain analytics firm TRM Labs, told CoinDesk.

Redbord said investigators are shifting enforcement away from individual digital wallets and toward crypto infrastructure,

“The concern is not simply that sanctioned actors used crypto, which is expected in a comprehensively sanctioned economy,” Redbord said. “The concern is that the activity appears concentrated through exchange-linked systems that function as repeatable financial access points for sanctioned networks.”

Redbord said U.S. authorities focus most closely when sanctions evasion efforts move from isolated wallet activity to what he described as service-layer infrastructure, including exchanges, stablecoin corridors, liquidity hubs and payment rails.

One Iranian-linked example identified by TRM Labs is Zedcex, a cryptocurrency exchange that the firm says operated as infrastructure controlled by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). According to TRM, the exchange processed approximately $1 billion in funds linked to the IRGC, accounting for roughly 56% of its total transaction volume, with that share peaking at 87% in 2024.

“This is direct evidence of a nation state actor turning not to laundering crypto proceeds through a series of wallet addresses, but to using crypto infrastructure,” Redbord said.

Iran’s crypto transactions grew to up to $10 billion

The comments add detail to growing concern in Washington over Iran’s expanding use of digital assets. Iran’s crypto transaction volumes reached roughly $8–10 billion last year, based on on-chain activity identified by TRM Labs and Chainalysis, as both state-linked groups and retail users turned to digital currencies, Reuters reported.

Last week, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned cryptocurrency exchanges for operating in Iran’s financial sector for the first time. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced sanctions against Zedcex and Zedxion both registered in the U.K. According to the Treasury’s statement, the exchanges facilitated transactions for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which the U.S. and its allies in the European Union designate as a terrorist organization. Since their registration in 2022, just one of these processed over $94 billion in transactions, the Treasury said.

The United Nations imposed sanctions on Iran in 2025, reinstating those related to the country’s nuclear program that had been lifted in 2015. It’s not the only country to resort to crypto to circumvent restrictions. In early 2025, blockchain analytics provider Chainalysis reported that U.S.-sanctioned countries had received nearly $16 billion in digital assets the year before.

Chainalysis estimates that Iranian wallets received a record $7.8 billion in 2025, up from $7.4 billion in 2024 and $3.17 billion in 2023. The firm estimates that about half of Iran’s crypto volumes last year were linked to the IRGC, a powerful military, political and economic force closely tied to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

By contrast, TRM Labs estimated that most Iran-linked crypto flows originate from retail users, reflecting efforts by ordinary Iranians to preserve savings, access dollars and maintain connectivity to the global financial system as the rial continues to weaken.

Government officials go beyond opportunistic use

“For most people in Iran, crypto remains primarily about access,” Redbord said. But he said the threshold is crossed when state-linked actors move beyond opportunistic use and begin relying on crypto-native infrastructure designed to sustain sanctioned finance at scale.

Cryptocurrency wallets are pseudonymous and easy to create, limiting the effectiveness of sanctions that target individual addresses, Redbord said.

“By the time an address is sanctioned it has very little operational value,” he said. “Rebuilding functioning financial infrastructure is much harder.”

Sanctions enforcement in crypto, he added, is most effective when it disrupts liquidity and access rather than targeting single wallets. That includes identifying clusters of activity, mapping counterparties and exposing service providers that repeatedly facilitate the movement of funds.

As blockchain networks increasingly function as payment and settlement rails, Redbord said their use by sanctioned states will continue to evolve.

“Lawful usage will continue to dominate,” he said. “But sophisticated state actors and professional sanctions evaders will increasingly operate through specialized infrastructure built on top of those same rails.”

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2026/02/03/u-s-treasury-probes-crypto-exchanges-over-iran-sanctions-evasion-trm-labs-says

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Regulatory Clarity Could Drive 40% of Americans to Adopt DeFi Protocols, Survey Shows

Regulatory Clarity Could Drive 40% of Americans to Adopt DeFi Protocols, Survey Shows

Over 40% of Americans express willingness to use decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols once regulatory clarity on crypto privacy emerges, according to a recent survey from crypto advocacy organization the DeFi Education Fund (DEF). The survey, released on September 18, revealed that many Americans feel frustrated with traditional financial institutions and seek greater control over their financial assets and data. Respondents believe DeFi innovations can deliver this change by providing affordability, equity, and consumer protection. The survey was conducted with Ipsos on KnowledgePanel and included supplementary in-depth interviews in the Bronx and Queens between August 18 and 21, polling 1,321 US adults. Survey Results Show Americans Ready to Adopt DeFi Protocols The findings demonstrate that many Americans are curious about DeFi despite its early stage. 42% of Americans indicated they would likely try DeFi if proposed legislation becomes law (9% extremely/very likely and 33% somewhat likely). 84% said they would use it to “make purchases online,” while 78% would use it to “pay bills.” According to the survey, 77% would use DeFi protocols to “save money,” and 12% of Americans are “extremely” and “very” interested in learning about DeFi. Moreover, nearly 4 in 10 Americans believe that DeFi can address high transaction and service fees found in traditional finance (39%). Consistent with other probability-based sample surveys, the Ipsos x DEF research shows that almost 1 in 5 Americans (18%) have owned or used crypto at some point in their lifetime. Nearly a quarter of Americans (22%) said they’re interested in learning more about nontraditional forms of finance, such as blockchain, crypto, or decentralized finance.Source: DEF The research shows that more than half (56%) of Americans want to reclaim control of their finances. Americans are interested in having control over their money at all times, and many seek ways to send or receive money without intermediaries. One Bronx, NY resident shared his experience of needing to transfer money between accounts, but the bank required him to certify the transfer and visit in person because he couldn’t move the amount he needed remotely. He expressed frustration about the situation because “it was my money… I didn’t understand why I was given a hard time.“ More than half of surveyed Americans agree there should be a way to digitally send money to people without third-party involvement, and this number rises notably for foreign-born Americans (66%). The researchers concluded that Americans are interested in DeFi and believe DeFi can reduce friction points in today’s financial system. Regulatory Developments on DeFi Adoption in the U.S Last month, DeFi Education Fund called on the US Senate Banking Committee to rethink how it plans to regulate the decentralized finance industry after reviewing its recently published discussion draft on a key crypto market-structure bill. The response, signed on behalf of DeFi Education Fund (DEF) members including a16z Crypto, Uniswap Labs, and Paradigm, argued the Responsible Financial Innovation Act of 2025 (RFA) bill should be crafted in a more tech-neutral manner. The group also emphasized that crypto developers should be protected from “inappropriate regulation meant for intermediaries,” and that self-custody rights for all Americans are “essential.” The banking committee is now working on the discussion draft to help ensure it builds on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025. The goal is to promote innovation in the $162 billion DeFi industry without compromising consumer protections or financial stability. On September 5, US Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said there was “nothing to be afraid of” about crypto payments operating outside the traditional banking system. This statement has raised hopes among many that DeFi would soon become the new financial infrastructure for Americans and the world
Share
CryptoNews2025/09/18 21:29
Michael Burry’s Bitcoin Warning: Crypto Crash Could Drag Down Gold and Silver Markets

Michael Burry’s Bitcoin Warning: Crypto Crash Could Drag Down Gold and Silver Markets

TLDR Michael Burry warned that bitcoin’s drop below $73,000 may have forced institutions to sell up to $1 billion in gold and silver to cover crypto losses Burry
Share
Coincentral2026/02/04 15:28
Michelin-starred dimsum chain Tim Ho Wan doubles HK footprint with 10th store

Michelin-starred dimsum chain Tim Ho Wan doubles HK footprint with 10th store

For Tim Ho Wan’s chief executive officer Young Sheng Lee, the brand’s aggressive expansion in its home turf helped create a proven growth model that can be replicated
Share
Rappler2026/02/04 15:27