The President of Brazil's Superior Court of Justice recently made an important ruling, refusing to open relevant files to the defense in a money laundering case. The suspect has fled to Oman and is identified as a key figure in the "Alkassariya Operation" case. The case spans from 2021 to 2024 and involves an organization engaging in money laundering through shell companies, large cash deposits, and complex multi-layered account structures, with the involved amount reaching approximately 1.2 billion reais. This case reflects the evolution of traditional money laundering methods in the digital age—using multiple account layers and cash flows to evade regulation. The judicial department's move demonstrates the importance placed on confidentiality in anti-money laundering investigations and also serves as a reminder to participants in the cryptocurrency industry that cross-border judicial cooperation and financial regulation are continuously deepening.
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BTCBeliefStation
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... This shell company nesting is really impressive; multi-layered account structures can't be prevented even on the chain.
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LayerZeroHero
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... This tactic is really outdated, still using the shell company approach? It was about time to upgrade to on-chain operations.
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TokenUnlocker
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... This method is really just taking traditional money laundering tactics and applying them on the blockchain, with multi-layer account structures and cash flows. To put it simply, it's the same old trick.
Escaping to Oman to evade justice is quite ruthless, but this time the court directly sealed the records. Anti-money laundering measures are indeed upgrading.
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ProbablyNothing
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... That old trick of shell companies is still being used, and it's getting more and more low-end. By the way, fleeing to Oman is indeed a very good choice of location.
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WenAirdrop
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais, shell companies + multi-layer accounts... This combination still has some tricks up its sleeve, no wonder they could escape to Oman.
The fact that fugitives can run so far shows what? It’s the same old vulnerabilities in traditional finance. Our blockchain needs to be transparent, everyone.
Confidential files? That sounds a bit ridiculous. Transparency should have been standard by now.
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CoffeeOnChain
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... With this scale, the old tricks of shell companies still work just as well in the Web3 era, haha.
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 9h ago
1.2 billion reais... With this scale, I can't imagine how it's done.
The President of Brazil's Superior Court of Justice recently made an important ruling, refusing to open relevant files to the defense in a money laundering case. The suspect has fled to Oman and is identified as a key figure in the "Alkassariya Operation" case. The case spans from 2021 to 2024 and involves an organization engaging in money laundering through shell companies, large cash deposits, and complex multi-layered account structures, with the involved amount reaching approximately 1.2 billion reais. This case reflects the evolution of traditional money laundering methods in the digital age—using multiple account layers and cash flows to evade regulation. The judicial department's move demonstrates the importance placed on confidentiality in anti-money laundering investigations and also serves as a reminder to participants in the cryptocurrency industry that cross-border judicial cooperation and financial regulation are continuously deepening.