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Sanctioned Russian Crypto Exchange Garantex Seized, Operators Charged With Money Laundering

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Garantex, a Russian crypto exchange popular with ransomware gangs and darknet markets, has been taken down in an international law enforcement operation, according to a Friday announcement from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).

On Thursday, a coalition of law enforcement agencies from the U.S., Germany and Finland seized Garantex’s domains and servers, and froze nearly $28 million in crypto tied to the exchange with the help of stablecoin issuer Tether.

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) sanctioned Garantex in 2022, accusing the exchange of knowingly facilitating money laundering for ransomware actors, including Conti and Black Basta, and darknet markets like Hydra, which, before its 2022 shut down, was once the largest darknet market in the world.

The sanctions had little to no effect on Garantex – according to data from blockchain sleuthing firm Elliptic, which aided the U.S. in its investigation, the exchange processed more than $60 billion in crypto transactions after being sanctioned. In total, the exchange has transacted over $96 billion.

According to court documents, Garantex collected virtually no know-your-customer (KYC) information about its clients, allowing criminals to use its services unchecked, and accounts were registered to customers using names like “Drug,” “hacker,” “taliban,” “Cashout, cleancoins” and “God.”

In addition to ransomware actors and darknet markets, Garantex’s clientele allegedly included North Korea’s state-sanctioned hacking squad, the Lazarus Group, which was behind the massive $1.5 billion Bybit heist last month, as well as Russian oligarchs, who used the service to evade international sanctions tied to the war in Ukraine. Sophisticated international sanctions evasion companies, like TGR Group, which cater to Russian elites, have been tied to Garantex.

Following the seizure of Garantex’s servers and domains, two of its operators have been criminally charged in the U.S. for their connections to the exchange.

Lithuanian national and Russian resident Aleksej Besciokov, 46, has been charged with money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to violate sanctions, and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business. Aleksandr Mira Serda, 40, a Russian citizen currently residing in the United Arab Emirates, has been charged with money laundering conspiracy.





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Garantex Operator Aleksej Besciokov Arrested in India: Report

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One of the operators of sanctioned Russian cryptocurrency exchange Garantex was arrested in India on Tuesday, according to two recent news reports.

Lithuanian national and Russian resident Aleksej Besciokov, 46, was reportedly arrested by police in the Indian state of Kerala, while vacationing on the country’s southern coast with his family, Techcrunch and KrebsonSecurity reported.

Last week, a coalition of international law enforcement agencies from the U.S., Germany and Finland seized Garantex’s domains and servers and froze nearly $28 million in crypto tied to the exchange with the help of stablecoin issuer Tether. The exchange was sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) in 2022, for knowingly facilitating money laundering for ransomware actors, including Conti and Black Basta, and darknet markets like Hydra, the largest such market in the world before its closure in 2022.

In addition to allegedly facilitating money laundering for criminals, including North Korea’s in-house hacking squad the Lazarus Group, which was behind the massive $1.5 billion Bybit heist last month, Garantex reportedly played a large role in sanctions evasion. Upscale sanctions evasion services like the TGR Group, which cater to Russian oligarchs, have been connected to the exchange.

Read more: Sanctioned Russian Crypto Exchange Garantex Seized, Operators Charged With Money Laundering

In conjunction with the seizure, U.S. prosecutors charged Besciokov and another of Garantex’s operators, 40-year-old Russian Aleksandr Mira Serda, a resident of the United Arab Emirates, with money laundering conspiracy. Besciokov is currently listed on the U.S. Secret Service’s Most Wanted list.

Neither the Kerala police nor the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) responded to CoinDesk’s request for comment about Besciokov’s reported arrest.





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