Skip to content
November 8, 2025Cryptopolitan logoCryptopolitan

Money laundering fraudsters favoring stablecoins over Bitcoin as preferred digital currency

Chainalysis research has found that stablecoins are replacing Bitcoin as the preferred digital currency to run money laundering ￰0￱ crypto analytics firm claimed that these fiat-pegged tokens were used in nearly 63% of money laundering transactions in ￰1￱ Chainalysis report asserted that stablecoins are mostly preferred because they are easy to send ￰2￱ can also be traded informally without identity ￰3￱ report says stablecoins are the new “back accounts” for criminal organizations. A “back account” is the final drop account from which the funds transferred across several accounts are ￰4￱ first account where deceived victims deposit their money is referred to as the “front account.” The report claims that, until 2021, Bitcoin was used almost exclusively for various money laundering crimes; however, stablecoins have recently become more untraceable, especially across ￰5￱ growth of stablecoins has also led to a corresponding increase in their illegal ￰6￱ supports Chainalysis’s findings The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) reported in June that the use of stablecoin by criminals has increased significantly since last ￰7￱ FATF also claimed that the majority of illicit activities on blockchains involve ￰8￱ United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) also published a report in January claiming Tether (USDT) was the most popular currency for criminal gangs in Southeast ￰9￱ main reason stablecoins were used for laundering proceeds from criminal activities is their ￰10￱ UNODC noted the difficulty in smuggling fiat currencies overseas; converting them in Korea is even more ￰11￱ Chainalysis report also found that converting criminal proceeds into stablecoins allows for easy cross-border ￰12￱ launderers can bypass exchanges by using overseas crypto exchanges that don’t require KYC (know your customer) ￰13￱ can also use OTC (over-the-counter) ￰14￱ report noted that while stablecoins are fundamentally traceable, their decentralized nature allows them to avoid government ￰15￱ further noted that although the transactions may leave a trail, crypto wallets make tracking difficult because they use randomized alphanumeric ￰16￱ or mixed stablecoins become even more challenging to track.

Korea’s stablecoin-related fraud surges The report also found that Korean criminals are increasingly turning to stablecoins for the so-called “Oda Jangip fraud”. The scam begins with false advertising on online shopping stores or second-hand marketplaces, and then money is scammed from unsuspecting ￰17￱ are used to launder proceeds from small-scale frauds (hundreds of thousands of dollars) and large-scale scams (hundreds of millions of dollars and more). However, the report suggests that criminals involved in stablecoin-related crimes often receive lenient ￰18￱ gave an example of one criminal who laundered over $188 million while working for a voice phishing ring in ￰19￱ criminal, whom the analytics firm chose to call Person A, bought Ethereum and transferred it to an overseas crypto ￰20￱ ETH was then swapped for USDT and transferred to a crypto wallet controlled by the ￰21￱ money laundering process began with domestic bank accounts, ETH, overseas crypto exchanges, stablecoins, and then a crypto wallet.

However, the criminal received only one year and six months in prison, suspended for three years in ￰22￱ criminal was reportedly sentenced to eight months in prison and two years’ probation for deceiving a victim who bought perfume through a second-hand ￰23￱ criminal received the customer’s 220,000 won deposit through a fake bank account, and then exchanged it for USDT to cash ￰24￱ report noted that financial fraud organizations that use stablecoins primarily use tactics such as voice phishing, stock/coin “leading room” scams, and second-hand market ￰25￱ then seek ways to launder the proceeds cleanly and withdraw them as ￰26￱ Bybit now and claim a $50 bonus in minutes

Cryptopolitan logo
Cryptopolitan

Latest news and analysis from Cryptopolitan

Bitwise Solana ETF Sees Steady Demand as Bitcoin, Ethereum Funds Shed Assets

Bitwise Solana ETF Sees Steady Demand as Bitcoin, Ethereum Funds Shed Assets

Including seed investments, the fund has generated more than $545 million in net inflows....

Decrypt logoDecrypt
1 min
Stable Labs Outlines Phased USDX Recovery Plan After Depeg Incident

Stable Labs Outlines Phased USDX Recovery Plan After Depeg Incident

The USDX depeg occurred after a Balancer exploit drained liquidity from Stable Labs’ synthetic stablecoin, causing its price to drop below $0.60 from a $1 peg. Stable Labs announced a...

CoinOtag logoCoinOtag
1 min
Ethereum faces tough path to $3.9K as sentiment and demand fizzle

Ethereum faces tough path to $3.9K as sentiment and demand fizzle

Weak demand from spot Ethereum ETFs, soft derivatives data, and macro fears have left Ether struggling to sustain $3,400 despite signs of steady onchain activity....

Cointelegraph logoCointelegraph
1 min