Binance moved $346m for seized crypto exchange Bitzlato: Report

US DOJ last week charged Bitzlato’s co-founder, a Russian living in China, with running a money-laundering haven.

Hand showing the Binance Exchange application for download in the Apple Inc. App Store on a smartphone
Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange, was among Bitzlato's top three counterparties by the amount of Bitcoin received between May 2018 and September 2022 [File: Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg]

Crypto giant Binance processed almost $346m in Bitcoin for the Bitzlato digital currency exchange, whose founder was arrested by United States authorities last week for allegedly running a “money laundering engine”, Reuters has reported citing blockchain data.

The US Justice Department on January 18 said it charged Bitzlato’s co-founder and majority shareholder Anatoly Legkodymov, a Russian national living in China, with operating an unlicensed money-exchange business that “fuelled a high-tech axis of crypto-crime” by processing $700m in illicit funds.

Bitzlato had touted the laxity of its background checks on clients, the Justice Department said, adding that when the exchange did ask users for ID information, “it repeatedly allowed them to provide information belonging to ‘straw man’ registrants”.

Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, was among Bitzlato’s top three counterparties by the amount of Bitcoin received between May 2018 and September 2022, the US Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) said last week.

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Binance was the only big crypto exchange among Bitzlato’s top counterparties, FinCEN said. It said others that carried out transactions with Bitzlato were the Russian-language “darknet” drugs marketplace Hydra, a small exchange called LocalBitcoins and a crypto investment website called Finiko, which FinCEN described as “an alleged crypto Ponzi scheme based in Russia”. FinCEN did not detail the scale of the entities’ interactions with Bitzlato.

Hong Kong-registered Bitzlato was a “primary money laundering concern” related to Russian illicit finance, FinCEN added. It will ban the transmission of funds to Bitzlato by US and other financial institutions from February 1, FinCEN said. It did not name Binance or other individual firms as being among those subject to the ban.

A Binance spokesperson said via email it had “provided substantial assistance” to international law enforcement to support their investigation of Bitzlato. The company is committed to “working collaboratively” with law enforcement, they added, declining to give details about its dealings with Bitzlato or the nature of its cooperation with such agencies.

Bitzlato, whose website says it has been seized by French authorities, could not be reached by Reuters. Legkodymov has not made any public comment since his arrest in Miami last week and did not respond to emailed requests for comment.

A lawyer for Finiko’s founder, Kirill Doronin, said FinCEN’s statement was “unfortunate for him [Doronin], as he continues to hope for the return of the cryptocurrency to investors from the people that stole it”. Doronin did not use investors’ crypto while Finiko was operating, the lawyer, Dmitry Grigoriadi, said.

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Hydra’s operator, who was indicted in the US last year, did not respond to requests to comment.

Finland-based LocalBitcoins said it has never had “any kind of cooperation or relationship” with Bitzlato. Some peer-to-peer (P2P) traders at LocalBitcoins “would also have been trading in BitZlato’s P2P market”, it said, adding that “there have practically been no transactions between LocalBitcoins and BitZlato since October 2022”.

Reuters has no evidence that the Binance, LocalBitcoins or Finiko transactions with Bitzlato, which the Justice Department described as a “haven for criminal proceeds and funds intended for use in criminal activity”, broke any rules or laws.

However, one former US banking regulator and one former law enforcement official said Binance’s status as one of the top counterparties would focus Justice Department and US Treasury attention on Binance’s compliance checks with Bitzlato.

“I wouldn’t call it a warning shot over the bow, I would call it a guided missile,” said Ross Delston – an independent US lawyer and former banking regulator who is also an expert witness on anti-money laundering issues – referring to FinCEN’s citing of Binance and LocalBitcoins.

The Justice Department and FinCEN declined to comment.

Changpeng Zhao, CEO of Binance.
Changpeng Zhao, CEO of Binance, has in the past called for clear and stable regulations for the crypto sector [File: Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters]

Binance moved more than 20,000 Bitcoin, worth $345.8m at the time they were transacted, across some 205,000 transactions for Bitzlato between May 2018 and its closure last week, according to a review of previously unreported data. The figures were compiled by leading US blockchain researcher Chainalysis and seen by Reuters.

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Bitcoin worth about $175m was transferred to Binance from Bitzlato in that period, making Binance its largest receiving counterparty, the data show.

About $90m of the total transfers took place after August 2021, when Binance said it would require users to submit identification to combat financial crime, according to the data from Chainalysis, which declined to comment. Such checks, Binance said in a blog last year, tackle “the funding and laundering of money from illicit activities”. Reuters could not determine whether Binance enforced its ID requirements with Bitzlato.

Darknet market

Chainalysis, which is used by US authorities to track illicit crypto flows, had warned in February of last year that Bitzlato was high-risk. In a report, Chainalysis said nearly half of Bitzlato’s transfers between 2019 and 2021 were “illicit and risky”, identifying almost $1bn in such transactions.

The US action against Bitzlato comes as the Justice Department investigates Binance for possible money laundering and sanctions violations. Some federal prosecutors have concluded that the evidence collected justifies filing charges against executives including founder and CEO Changpeng Zhao, Reuters reported in December.

Reuters could not establish whether Binance’s dealings with Bitzlato were under review.

Binance, which does not reveal the location of its core exchange, has processed at least $10bn in payments for criminals and companies seeking to evade US sanctions, Reuters found in a series of articles last year based on blockchain data, court and company records.

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The reporting also showed that Binance intentionally kept weak anti-money laundering controls and plotted to evade regulators in the US and elsewhere, according to former executives and company documents.

Binance disputed the articles, calling the illicit-fund calculations inaccurate and the descriptions of its compliance controls “outdated”. The exchange said last year that it is “driving higher industry standards” and seeking to improve its ability to detect illegal crypto activity.

Both Binance and Bitzlato were significant counterparties of the world’s largest darknet drugs marketplace Hydra. The Russian-language site was shut down by US and German authorities last year. The Justice Department said Bitzlato exchanged more than $700m in crypto with Hydra, either directly or through intermediaries.

In an article published last June, Reuters reviewed blockchain data that showed that buyers and sellers on Hydra used Binance to make and receive crypto payments worth about $780m between 2017 and 2022. A Binance spokesperson said at the time that this figure was “inaccurate and overblown”.

Source: Reuters

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