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Binance Under Fire: Report Alleges Massive Post-Settlement Compliance Failures

Binance Under Fire: Report Alleges Massive Post-Settlement Compliance Failures

Key Takeaways

A new report from the Financial Times alleges that cryptocurrency exchange Binance allowed a network of suspicious accounts to move billions of dollars after it pledged to overhaul its compliance systems as part of a landmark $4.3 billion settlement with U.S. authorities in 2023.

Billions in Questionable Transactions

According to internal data reviewed by the FT, a specific network of 13 user accounts processed approximately $1.7 billion in transactions from 2021 onward. Crucially, about $144 million of that total was moved after the November 2023 plea agreement. The files reportedly contain detailed user information, including KYC documents and transaction histories for individuals in countries like Venezuela, Brazil, Syria, Niger, and China.

“When accounts displaying repeated red flags remain active, that points to an escalation and oversight challenge rather than one of market structure. Robust governance, sanctions screening, and post-trade surveillance are of critical importance,” said Nick Heather, head of trading at financial services firm ONE.io.

Glaring Red Flags and Anomalies

The report details specific accounts exhibiting patterns that compliance experts would deem highly suspicious:

Former prosecutors noted such activity is typically consistent with an unregistered money-transmitting business.

Broken Promises and Regulatory Scrutiny

As part of its 2023 plea deal, Binance committed to implementing real-time monitoring, enhanced due diligence, and regular customer reviews to detect illicit finance. U.S. authorities had previously accused the exchange of failing to report over 100,000 suspicious transactions linked to terrorism, ransomware, and narcotics.

Regulatory and AML specialists cited in the report state these new findings raise fresh, serious questions about how effectively Binance has implemented the governance and surveillance upgrades it promised. The report also notes that all 13 accounts in question received about $29 million in USDT from wallets later frozen by Israel under anti-terrorism laws.

Binance did not provide an immediate comment on the allegations. This report emerges in the wake of former U.S. President Donald Trump's pardon of Binance founder Changpeng "CZ" Zhao in October.

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