
The U.S. Division of Justice announced on Friday prison costs towards the directors of the Russian cryptocurrency trade Garantex for allegedly facilitating cash laundering by prison and terrorist organizations, in addition to violating U.S. sanctions.
The 2 directors are Lithuanian nationwide and Russian resident Aleksej Besciokov, 46, and Aleksandr Mira Serda, 40, a Russian nationwide residing within the United Arab Emirates, who “knew that prison proceeds have been being laundered via Garantex and took steps to hide the facilitation of unlawful actions on its platform,” according to the indictment towards them.
The DOJ stated that Garantex “obtained a whole bunch of thousands and thousands in prison proceeds and was used to facilitate varied crimes, together with hacking, ransomware, terrorism, and drug trafficking,” and that the trade processed at the least $96 billion in cryptocurrency transactions since 2019.
Within the indictment, prosecutors accuse Besciokov of personally permitting transactions linked to cybercriminals, together with the North Korean-government hackers often called Lazarus Group.
The announcement of the indictment got here a day after the U.S. Secret Service and a coalition of legislation enforcement businesses took down and seized the official websites of Garantex, changing their contents with a banner that includes the businesses’ logos and asserting the location’s seizure.
When TechCrunch reached out to a few Garantex e-mail addresses listed on its official web page previous to the takedown, our emails have been returned as undelivered. Garantex didn’t reply to a number of requests for remark via its official Telegram channel.

Besciokov and Mira Sera are each accused of a cash laundering conspiracy, whereas Besciokov can also be accused of conspiracy to violate sanctions and conspiracy, and of working an unlicensed cash transmitting enterprise. Each face a most of 20 years in jail for the cash laundering cost, whereas Besciokov faces one other most sentence of 20 years for conspiracy to violate U.S. sanctions, and one other most of 5 years for conspiracy to function an unlicensed cash transmitting enterprise.
It’s unclear if the 2 have been arrested. Shannon Shevlin, a spokesperson for the Division of Justice, informed TechCrunch that the DOJ doesn’t know if Mira Serda has been arrested within the UAE.
The 2 charged Garantex directors couldn’t be reached by TechCrunch for remark.
U.S. prosecutors alleged that Besciokov and Mira Serda knew that their crypto trade was used for cash laundering and actively labored to make that occur even when Russian authorities requested questions. In accordance with the DOJ, when Russian legislation enforcement requested data sooner or later associated to a Mira Serda account on Garantex, the corporate offered incomplete data, and “claimed the account was not verified.”
“In actuality, Garantex had related the account with Mira Serda’s private figuring out paperwork,” in accordance with the indictment.
Hundreds of thousands in crypto seized, DOJ confirms
Garantex has been the main target of Western authorities motion for a number of years.
In 2022, as a part of a sequence of actions towards Russian cybercrime, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned Garantex, mentioning an evaluation that confirmed that “over $100 million in transactions are related to illicit actors and darknet markets, together with practically $6 million from Russian [Ransomware as a Service] gang Conti and in addition together with roughly $2.6 million from [darknet market] Hydra.”
Additionally, in 2024, as a part of a sequence of sanctions towards Russia for invading Ukraine, the European Union sanctioned Garantex, alleging the trade is “carefully related to EU-sanctioned Russian banks.”
In accordance with the DOJ, regardless of sanctions imposed by the U.S. authorities, Besciokov and his co-conspirators violated sanctions legislation by persevering with to just accept transactions with U.S.-based entities, and in addition “redesigned Garantex’s operations to evade and violate U.S. sanctions and induce U.S. companies to unwittingly transact with Garantex in violation of the sanctions.”
“For instance, Garantex moved its operational cryptocurrency wallets to totally different digital foreign money addresses each day with the intention to make it troublesome for U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchanges to determine and block transactions with Garantex accounts,” learn the DOJ announcement.
The DOJ additionally stated that U.S. legislation enforcement froze over $26 million in funds used to facilitate Garantex’s cash laundering. DOJ spokesperson Shevlin informed TechCrunch that the division froze a complete of 23,034,884.75 Tether and 35.57 Bitcoin on Binance (value round $3 million as of Friday), amounting to about $26.2 million.
Even earlier than these legislation enforcement actions, Garantex introduced on Thursday that it had suspended “all companies, together with cryptocurrency withdrawals,” after stablecoin issuer Tether blocked wallets belonging to Garantex that have been holding greater than $28 million.
“We’ve got dangerous information. Tether has entered the conflict towards the Russian crypto market,” Garantex wrote on its official Telegram channel in an announcement. “We’re combating and won’t quit! Please word that each one [Tether] in Russian wallets is at present beneath menace. As at all times, we’re the primary, however not the final.”
After the DOJ’s announcement on Friday, Garantex posted an alert on Telegram about scammers “pretending to be the restored Garantex trade or providing to withdraw funds.”
“These are all scammers! Their purpose is to realize entry to customers’ private information, pockets addresses and different delicate data,” the announcement in Russian learn, in accordance with a machine translation of it.
The announcement made no point out of the web site takedown, nor of the indictments of Besciokov and Mira Serda.