The US Justice Department has seized $3.6 billion worth of bitcoin linked to the 2016 hack of the Hong Kong cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex.
Authorities also arrested two people, charging them with conspiracy to launder cryptocurrency stolen during the hack. The bitcoin total taken in the hack is currently valued at $4.5 billion.
Officials seized over 94,000 of the world’s most popular crypto from Ilya Lichtenstein, and his wife, Heather Morgan. The DOJ said that the seized bitcoin are valued at $3.6 billion, making this the largest financial seizure in the department’s history. The case shows law enforcement can follow money through the blockchain, the DOJ said.
“We will not allow cryptocurrency to be a safe haven for money laundering or a zone of lawlessness within our financial system,” Kenneth Polite Jr., assistant attorney general for the DOJ’s criminal division, said in a statement.
Yet the Justice Department’s ability to track the allegedly laundered bitcoin is significant. Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and ether are exchanged on decentralized blockchains, which allows people to send and receive these tokens with anonymity. That anonymity has attracted criminals, with bitcoin and the like often being used as black-market currency.
Cryptocurrency use in crime included about $14 billion transferred to illicit addresses last year, according to a January report from Chainalysis. However, crime accounted for less than 1% of cryptocurrency transactions last year.
The DOJ said, citing court documents, that the Bitfinex hacker sent 119,754 bitcoin to Lichtenstein’s digital wallet through a series of 2,000 transactions. Around 25,000 bitcoin — today worth about $1 billion — were transferred out of his wallet.
Lichtenstein allegedly attempted to disguise these stolen tokens, but the DOJ said it was able to follow his transactions on the blockchain. The department alleges that some bitcoin were used to buy gold and NFTs, while others were translated into funds that appeared in Lichtenstein and Morgan’s bank accounts.
The remaining 94,000 bitcoin are what was seized Tuesday. If convicted, both Lichtenstein and Morgan could face up to 20 years in prison for conspiracy to commit money laundering, plus five years for conspiracy to defraud the United States.