
The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday proposed cutting off the Cambodia-based Huione Group from the U.S. financial system, citing the cyber-crime help the illicit marketplace gives to North Korean hackers and other criminal groups.
The Telegram-based operation has been a “critical node for laundering proceeds of cyber heists” and aiding in so-called “pig butchering” scams that typically use fraudulent romantic ties to tap people for crypto assets, according to the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) that proposed severing it from the financial system.
Huione, which offers personal data and money laundering services, has been said to handle as much as $24 billion of such transactions, according to analytical firm Elliptic. The Cambodian marketplace also launched its own stablecoin earlier this year.
“Huione Group has established itself as the marketplace of choice for malicious cyber actors like the DPRK and criminal syndicates, who have stolen billions of dollars from everyday Americans,” Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, in a statement. So FinCEN sought to tap its nuclear-option power — using Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT Act — to sever Huione from the financial system.
As recently as last year, Phnom Penh-based Huione Pay was said to receive crypto totaling more than $150,000 from a wallet associated with North Korean hackers Lazarus, the group accused of stealing billions of dollars in crypto over the past several years that’s likely used to fund national projects.
부인 성명:info@kdj.com
제공된 정보는 거래 조언이 아닙니다. kdj.com은 이 기사에 제공된 정보를 기반으로 이루어진 투자에 대해 어떠한 책임도 지지 않습니다. 암호화폐는 변동성이 매우 높으므로 철저한 조사 후 신중하게 투자하는 것이 좋습니다!
본 웹사이트에 사용된 내용이 귀하의 저작권을 침해한다고 판단되는 경우, 즉시 당사(info@kdj.com)로 연락주시면 즉시 삭제하도록 하겠습니다.