Washington: The Justice Department said Thursday that it has seized millions of dollars from cryptocurrency accounts that militant groups, including al-Qaida and the Islamic State, relied on to finance their organizations and violent plots.
Law enforcement officials said the groups used the accounts to solicit donations, including by trying to raise money from the sale of fraudulent personal protective equipment for the coronavirus pandemic.
Officials described it as the largest-ever seizure of virtual currency funds related to terrorism. It's also part of a broader Justice Department goal of disrupting the financing of extremist organizations, including those designated as foreign terror groups.
"Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin are favoured for illicit transactions because they are perceived as hard to trace, and one of the groups singled out Thursday explicitly encouraged donations by telling potential contributors that the money trail would be difficult for law enforcement to untangle," the department said.
"The legal action, which included undercover law enforcement work and a forfeiture complaint filed in Washington's federal court, is meant to deprive the organizations of funds needed to buy weapons and develop fighters," Assistant Attorney General John Demers said in a conference call with reporters announcing the case.
“This action shows that law enforcement remains a step ahead of them," said Demers, the department’s top national security official.
The department said it has confiscated about USD 2 million so far, in addition to more than 300 cryptocurrency accounts, four websites and four Facebook pages related to the schemes.
The seized funds are expected to be turned over to a fund for victims of terrorist attacks, officials said.
One prong of the US investigation targeted the military wing of Hamas, known as the al-Qassam Brigades, which last year began a public fundraising campaign through social media to solicit Bitcoin donations while reassuring potential donors that such contributions would be untraceable and used for violence, officials said. It also posted on websites instructions for how to anonymously make donations.
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