• CONTACT
  • MARKETCAP
Coin  Deskk
  • BOOKMARKS
  • What’s New
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Pages
    • Contact Us
    • Search Page
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • Home Coin
  • Home Coin
Reading: INTERPOL operation blocks illicit crypto transfers and leads to 5,811 arrests
Share
Coin  DeskkCoin  Deskk
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Crypto
  • Market
  • Blockchain
  • Contact
Search
© 2026 Coindeskk News Network. All Rights Reserved.
What's New

INTERPOL operation blocks illicit crypto transfers and leads to 5,811 arrests

Crypto
Last updated: July 9, 2026 3:08 pm
Crypto
Published: July 9, 2026
Share
INTERPOL operation blocks illicit crypto transfers and leads to 5,811 arrests

INTERPOL-led operation has resulted in 5,811 arrests, blocked more than 31,000 bank accounts, and intercepted $293 million in illicit assets across 97 countries and territories during a global crackdown on fraud and crypto-linked money laundering. Summary INTERPOL’s global anti fraud operation led to 5,811 arrests and intercepted $293 million in illicit assets across 97 countries and territories. Thai authorities uncovered a crypto laundering network that allegedly moved romance scam proceeds through cross chain token swaps, with one wallet processing more than $122.5 million. The operation identified more than 142,000 victims and used rapid payment blocking tools to freeze suspicious fiat and cryptocurrency transfers. According to an INTERPOL statement published on Thursday, Operation First Light ran between Jan. 15 and April 30, 2026, targeting social engineering scams including business email compromise, romance scams, sextortion, impersonation, investment fraud and the money laundering networks that supported them. Authorities identified more than 142,000 victims during the operation, solved 23,715 cases, identified 15,606 suspects, and issued 99 notices and diffusions. The operation also relied on INTERPOL’s Global Rapid Intervention of Payments (I-GRIP) mechanism, which enabled investigators to rapidly freeze suspicious fiat and cryptocurrency transfers. Tomonobu Kaya, director of the INTERPOL Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption Centre, warned that criminal syndicates continue to exploit human psychology to deceive victims and said coordinated international action remains necessary to combat cyber-enabled financial crime and the laundering networks behind it. Crypto laundering network uncovered Among the cases highlighted by INTERPOL, Thai police arrested two suspects after uncovering a cryptocurrency laundering operation that allegedly moved proceeds from romance scams through multiple digital assets using cross-chain token swaps to hide the origin of funds. Authorities said one 20-year-old suspect’s crypto wallet processed more than $122.5 million over a 10-month period. Elsewhere, law enforcement in Singapore and Oman blocked a $6.6 million transfer linked to a business email compromise scheme, while police in Macao stopped a victim from sending nearly $372,000 to scammers posing as public officials. In Eswatini, police arrested 82 people after dismantling an online gambling, money laundering, and impersonation network that allegedly operated from a fake Brazilian police station, convincing victims to transfer money for “safekeeping” before stealing the funds. Authorities in Palau also deported 22 people accused of running hotel-based scam centres that used cryptocurrency and illegal gambling websites to target overseas victims. The latest operation adds to a series of international actions targeting cryptocurrency laundering networks. In June, U.S. prosecutors charged two alleged operators of the AudiA6 crypto laundering service, accusing them of processing more than $389 million in transactions and receiving over 10,000 Bitcoin since 2021 while allegedly helping customers conceal the origin of criminal proceeds. Investigators from multiple countries also seized servers, froze crypto assets, and replaced the group’s online infrastructure with seizure notices. Earlier this year, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned a network accused of helping North Korea move proceeds from overseas IT worker schemes through cryptocurrency. According to the Treasury, facilitators converted digital assets into cash or used crypto transactions to disguise the source of funds before sending them to accounts linked to the North Korean regime.

Introducing a new category of stablecoin yield from OpenTrade, powered by Figment staking and custodied by Crypto.com
Crypto Revolution: UK Groups Push for Urgent Blockchain Policy Shift!
Crypto Market Surge! Inside the Explosive Growth Driving Fortunes Upwards Now
ADA price rebound on low volume raises risk of another leg down
Wirex joins Visa program to test AI agents making payments

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Crypto IPO autopsy: Gemini down 89%, pipeline frozen Crypto IPO autopsy: Gemini down 89%, pipeline frozen
Next Article Robinhood insiders sell HOOD shares after stock rally Robinhood insiders sell HOOD shares after stock rally

Follow US

Find US on Socials
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Subscribe to our newslettern

Get Newest Articles Instantly!

- Advertisement -
Ad image
Popular News
A16z Delves Deep: $70m Bet on EigenLayer Before EigenCloud Takes Off
A16z Delves Deep: $70m Bet on EigenLayer Before EigenCloud Takes Off
Shiba Inu Plunges: Will It Survive This Critical Test?
Shiba Inu Plunges: Will It Survive This Critical Test?
Solana Breaks Limits: Prepare for Unstoppable Blockchain Revolution Ahead
Solana Breaks Limits: Prepare for Unstoppable Blockchain Revolution Ahead

Follow Us on Socials

We use social media to react to breaking news, update supporters and share information

Twitter Youtube Telegram Linkedin
Coin  Deskk

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business blockchain and crypto news network on the planet.

Subscribe to our newsletter

You can be the first to find out the latest news and tips about trading, markets...

© Coindeskk News Network. All Rights Reserved.