Is the Crypto Platform Free from Liability? Is Anti-Money Laundering Law Giving the Green Light to Crypto?
Original Article Title: If it's crypto it's not money laundering
Original Article Author: JP Koning, Moneyness
Original Article Translation: Luffy, Foresight News
Recently, Deputy Attorney General of the United States, Todd Blanche, issued a memo to internal staff stating that the crypto industry is "vital to the nation's economic development." As a result, staff have been instructed not to target cryptocurrency platforms, such as exchanges and mixers like Tornado and ChipMixer, anymore based on "end-user behavior."
How is "end-user behavior" understood? There is further explanation in Blanche's memo. He specifically mentioned how drug trafficking groups engaging in fentanyl transactions often use cryptocurrency, which is a well-known fact. For example, Tether is a common payment method in fentanyl transactions. However, the Department of Justice went on to explain that while it will continue to investigate the financial crimes of drug trafficking groups, terrorist organizations, and other illegal entities, it "will not take action against platforms used by these criminal groups for their illicit activities."
This contrasts with established financial laws worldwide. In traditional financial law, financial institutions are usually held responsible for "end-user behavior." When criminals use them to "conduct illegal activities," financial institutions can be held accountable, which is defined as money laundering in the law.
Money laundering is a dual crime. On one hand, there are the criminals holding dirty money; on the other hand, there are the criminals' counterparties, the financial intermediaries (banks, cryptocurrency exchanges, remittance platforms) handling the dirty money, both of whom can be prosecuted. Last year, Deutsche Bank was prosecuted for having clients associated with drug trafficking, and financial service providers are held accountable for their clients' crimes.
The same applies to sanctions evasion. One party is the entity being sanctioned, and the other is the financial platform facilitating the evasion, both of whom can be prosecuted.
If, as Blanche implies, cryptocurrency platforms are no longer targeted for "end-user behavior," it actually means that the second link in money laundering or sanctions evasion activities is no longer considered a violation, at least when it comes to crypto platforms. Therefore, if a drug trafficking group were to deposit dirty money into an exchange like Binance, the exchange would not be investigated, but only the drug trafficking group would.
In reality, cryptocurrency technology is akin to being granted a "get-out-of-money-laundering-jail-free" card. Observers can easily speculate that crypto platforms may relax their compliance measures as a result, since they will not face prosecution, which in turn would allow more criminals to exploit their services.
The memo provides more details. The ongoing Tornado case and ChipMixer case are likely to be dropped, as the memo explicitly states that the Department of Justice will no longer target mixing services. Tornado is a smart contract-based mixer, with most of its infrastructure running through automated code, while first-generation mixers like ChipMixer are fully operated by humans. Due to a series of criminal convictions, ChipMixer's users were on the verge of disappearing, but with the fading threat of prosecution, they will become active again.
The memo prohibits Department of Justice attorneys from targeting "offline wallets," which likely refers to "non-custodial wallets," mostly applicable to stablecoins. Stablecoin users can hold stablecoins like USDT or USDC in a personal encrypted wallet in a non-custodial manner or return them to the issuer for redemption into actual dollars, which in that case is a "custodial" form. This seems to indicate that if criminals use non-custodial stablecoins, the issuer itself will not be a prosecution target. If this is encouraging fentanyl trafficking groups to use stablecoins, it is indeed a "brilliant" policy.
This decriminalization of cryptocurrency money laundering behavior acknowledges many existing operational methods in the crypto ecosystem. For example, just last week, I reported on stablecoin issuers like Tether and Circle allowing sanctioned Russian exchange Garantex to hold their stablecoins. The issuers seem to believe that providing access to illegal end-users like Garantex is legitimate. And now, the government seems to confirm their view by no longer targeting non-custodial wallets due to "end-user behavior."
Now that we have discussed some of the direct legal and technical consequences of this decision, it is necessary to ask: Who will actually benefit from this sudden policy shift? Because apparently, most people will be worse off as a result.
The following are just my speculations; this policy may aim to appease and reward the following groups:
· Liberals who voted for Trump, who strangely believe that money laundering should not be a crime.
· Crypto entrepreneurs in San Francisco who want to build low-cost financial platforms and are unwilling to bear the cost of building expensive compliance projects to prevent criminal use. These entrepreneurs also hope their crypto platforms can access bank accounts, and banks have been hesitant to do so due to the high risk of cryptocurrency money laundering. Now with the cryptocurrency exemption, banks have nothing to worry about. Crypto entrepreneurs support Trump, provide funding for him, and are an important part of his administration, so this is a reward for them.
· Trump himself, who seems to be intent on building a bribery and protection system similar to Putin's, which requires a money-laundering-friendly financial infrastructure. The Department of Justice's memo may be an initial step in creating this system.
In the long run, banks and other traditional financial service providers may also benefit. With cryptocurrency-based financial activities now freed from a key legal constraint, every crypto-friendly financial service provider will be incentivized. This means converting your US dollar savings account at Bank of America into a blockchain-based US dollar savings account. Doing so can enable banks and fintech companies to reduce compliance costs and increase profits.
Once the entire financial industry leverages this loophole to complete the transformation, money laundering will ya no longer be a criminal activity, and since the Department of Justice will no longer prosecute mixers, it means everyone will have full anonymity.
From a public policy standpoint, this memo is rotten to the core. Just like theft and fraud, money laundering is unethical and should be punished. Allowing a segment of society to operate outside the bounds of any law erodes public trust in the government and the financial legal system.
More broadly, society's anti-money laundering laws are a key line of defense against various other crimes. Because of the existence of anti-money laundering laws, the financial system works hard to keep so-called money laundering upstream crimes such as robbery, human trafficking, and corruption at bay, making it more difficult to carry out these crimes. This deterrent effect prevents many potential criminals from leaving legitimate economic activity. Once these laws are repealed, the lure of crime will greatly increase.
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BeatSwap is evolving towards a full-stack Web3 infrastructure, covering the entire lifecycle of IP rights.
BeatSwap, a global Web3 Intellectual Property (IP) infrastructure project, is attempting to overcome the current fragmentation limitations of the Web3 ecosystem, building a full-stack system that covers the entire lifecycle of IP rights.
Currently, most Web3 projects are still in the stage of functional fragmentation, often focusing only on a single aspect, such as IP asset tokenization, transaction functionality, or a simple incentive model. This structural dispersion has become a key bottleneck hindering the industry's scale application.
BeatSwap's approach is more integrated, integrating multiple core modules into the same system, including:
· IP authentication and on-chain registration
· Authorization-based revenue sharing mechanism
· User-engagement-driven incentive system
· Transaction and liquidity infrastructure
Through the above integration, the platform builds an end-to-end closed-loop path, allowing IP rights to complete a full cycle of "creation, use, and monetization" within the same ecosystem.
BeatSwap is not limited to existing crypto users but is attempting to take the global music industry as a starting point, actively creating new market demand. Its core strategies include:
Exploring and incubating music creators (Artist discovery)
Building a fan community
Igniting IP-centric content consumption demand
The current global music industry is valued at around $260 billion, with over 2 billion digital music users. This means that the potential market corresponding to the tokenization and financialization of IP far exceeds the traditional crypto user base.
In this context, BeatSwap positions itself at the intersection of "real-world content demand" and "on-chain infrastructure," attempting to bridge the structural gap between content production and financial flow.
BeatSwap's upcoming core product "Space" is scheduled to launch in the second quarter of 2026. This product is defined as the SocialFi layer in the ecosystem, aiming to directly connect creators with users and achieve deep integration with other platform modules.
Key designs include:
A fan-centric interactive mechanism
Exposure and distribution logic based on $BTX staking
User paths connected to DeFi and liquidity structures
Thus, a complete user behavior loop is formed within the platform: Discovery → Participation → Consumption → Rewards → Trading
$BTX is designed to be a core utility asset within the ecosystem, rather than just a simple incentive token, with its value directly tied to platform activity and IP use cases.
Main features include:
· Yield distribution based on on-chain authorized actions
· Value reflection based on IP usage and user engagement dynamics
· Support for staking and DeFi participation mechanisms
· Value growth driven by ecosystem expansion
With the increased frequency of IP use, the utility and value support of $BTX will enhance simultaneously, helping alleviate the "disconnect between value and utility" issue present in traditional Web3 token models to some extent.
Currently, $BTX has been listed on several mainstream exchanges, including:
Binance Alpha
Gate
MEXC
OKX Boost
As the launch of "Space" approaches, BeatSwap is actively pursuing more exchange listings to further enhance liquidity and global accessibility, laying a foundation for future market expansion.
BeatSwap's goal is no longer limited to the traditional Web3 narrative but aims to target over 2 billion digital music users and a trillion KRW-scale content market.
By integrating content creators, users, capital, and liquidity into a blockchain framework centered around IP rights, BeatSwap is striving to build a next-generation infrastructure focused on "IP tokenization."
BeatSwap integrates IP authentication, authorization distribution, incentive mechanism, transaction system, and market construction to establish a unified structure that bridges the full lifecycle path of IP rights.
With the launch of the Q2 2026 "Space," the project is expected to become a key infrastructure connecting content and finance in the IP-RWA (Real World Assets) track.

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