Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cryptocurr­ency service hit with sanctions

- TORY NEWMYER

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department on Friday issued its first-ever sanctions against a cryptocurr­ency “mixer,” a service that pools digital assets to obscure their owners, as it continues its pursuit of more than $600 million that North Korean hackers stole from the Axie Infinity video game.

The move targets a mixer called Blender.io. The hackers have used it to process more than $20.5 million of their haul since their March attack on the game, Treasury said.

The cybercrimi­nal gang — known as the Lazarus Group, which U.N. investigat­ors have said is a key funding source for North Korea’s weapons programs — had laundered nearly $100 million as of late last month, The Post reported, citing data from blockchain analytics firm Elliptic.

Using another mixer called Tornado Cash, the hackers continued to process batches of their stolen crypto even after it was known they were the thieves, highlighti­ng the challenge U.S. authoritie­s confront in keeping pace with cybercrimi­nals rapidly moving millions of dollars across the globe with mere keystrokes.

“Virtual currency mixers that assist illicit transactio­ns pose a threat to U.S. national security interests,” Brian Nelson, Treasury undersecre­tary for terrorism and financial intelligen­ce, said in a statement.

“We are taking action against illicit financial activity by the DPRK and will not allow state-sponsored thievery and its money-laundering enablers to go unanswered.”

It was not clear why the Treasury Department only designated Blender.io.

A department spokespers­on did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

The Treasury Department noted in its announceme­nt that while most crypto activity is legal, “it can be used for illicit activity, including sanctions evasion, through mixers, peer-to-peer exchangers, dark net markets, and exchanges.

This includes the facilitati­on of heists, ransomware schemes, and other cybercrime­s.”

The department called mixers that assist criminals “a threat to U.S. national security interests” and said it would continue to investigat­e them and “consider the range of authoritie­s” it has to respond.

“Criminals have increased use of anonymity-enhancing technologi­es, including mixers, to help hide the movement or origin of funds,” the announceme­nt said.

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