Workers' Daily: Abnormal Transaction of Cryptocurrency May Involve Criminal Activities
BlockBeats News, August 21, Recently, the Second Intermediate People's Court of Beijing Municipality heard a case involving the use of cryptocurrency transactions to conceal and disguise criminal proceeds. The defendant, knowing that it was criminal proceeds, still assisted in transferring them and was sentenced to 3 years and 6 months in prison. In August 2024, Mr. Liu sold USDT (commonly known as U Coin) to Mr. He, knowing that the cash held by Mr. He was proceeds of crime, and received cash of 200,000 yuan. The whereabouts of the involved funds are now untraceable. Upon investigation, the 200,000 yuan transferred by Mr. Liu was money defrauded from others.
The final judgment of the court held that Mr. Liu, knowing that it was criminal proceeds, still assisted in the transfer, and his behavior constituted the crime of concealing and disguising criminal proceeds. The court sentenced Mr. Liu to the crime of concealing and disguising criminal proceeds, sentenced him to 3 years and 6 months in prison, imposed a fine of 40,000 yuan, and confiscated his illegal gains.
The judge stated that the defendants in cases of concealing and disguising criminal proceeds exhibit typical profit-seeking behavior and harbor a sense of luck. Many defendants cannot resist the temptation of short-term high profits and commit crimes. Although the publicity campaign for combating telecommunications fraud has been intensifying, most defendants have some awareness that the assets involved may be proceeds of fraud. However, some still harbor the illusion that their acts of concealing and disguising are hard to detect, or even if discovered, the consequences are not severe, thus daring to challenge the law.
The judge reminded everyone to be vigilant against any requests disguised as "abnormal transactions" under the guise of cryptocurrency. Do not be tempted by so-called "fees," "price differences," or other negligible gains, or trust promises from others to participate in trading, transferring, or converting cryptocurrency or funds of unknown origin. Knowing that it is someone else's criminal proceeds but still assisting in conversion, transfer, or cashing out may violate the criminal law, constitute the crime of concealing and disguising criminal proceeds, and face severe criminal penalties. (Workers' Daily)
You may also like

Circle has been on the market for 270 days, working hard to shed the stablecoin label

Interpreting Stripe’s 2025 Letter: Despite the Crypto Winter, It’s Still Stablecoin Season

After Jane Street Halts 10% Sell-Off, BTC Sees Strong Rebound

Myanmar in Turmoil: The Sanctity of the Dollar, Trapped Youth, and the Underground Financial System

Wall Street's Most Mysterious Money-Making Machine, Crashing Bitcoin Price at 10 a.m. Sharp Every Day

Key Market Information Discrepancy on February 26th - A Must-Read! | Alpha Morning Report

How was the Backpack staking token swap established?

Can You Still Launch a VC Firm Today?

Claude Cowork Adds Scheduled Task, Jane Street Incident Continues to Stir, What's the Overseas Crypto Community Talking About Today?

Leveraging $6,000 to Move a $200M Market Cap? How Polymarket Creates an "Insider Trading Illusion"
WEEX AI Hackathon: $8B Traded, Real AI Strategies Proven
How profitable is AI trading in real crypto markets? WEEX's $1.88M global AI hackathon reveals $8B volume, 227% ROI, API strategy data, and why only 8 of 37 traders made profit.

Advantages and Challenges of Modern Cryptocurrency Trading Platforms
Key Takeaways: Modern cryptocurrency trading platforms offer enhanced security measures to protect user assets. User-friendly interfaces and comprehensive…

Original Article Unavailable: Bridging Cryptocurrencies and the Emerging Trends
Key Takeaways Cryptocurrency markets are increasingly woven into the fabric of global financial systems. With advancements in blockchain…

Untitled
I’m sorry, but I am unable to fulfill this request as it lacks specific content from the original…

The one who bought the Meta stablecoin Diem back in the day is a good friend of SBF.

February 25th Market Key Insights, How Much Did You Miss Out?

Dragonfly Partner Haseeb Conversation: The AI Apocalypse is Far Away; Smart Contracts are Machine-Destined Law
