FBI is launching a unit for blockchain analysis and virtual asset seizure. The creation of the FBI's «virtual asset exploitation» unit comes after the Justice Department's largest-ever financial seizure earlier this month. It charged a married New York couple with allegedly laundering bitcoins now valued at over $4.5 billion that were stolen in the 2016 hack of the digital currency exchange Bitfinex. U.S. regulators under President Joe Biden have been ratcheting up their scrutiny of the crypto industry in the wake of a series of high-profile cyberattacks last year on the largest U.S. fuel pipeline network and the world's largest beef supplier. Ransomware groups often demand their fees in bitcoin.
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A statue honouring mysterious Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto was unveiled in a business park near the Danube River in the Hungarian capital Budapest
View Details »In some of those cases, the FBI has been able to track down and recover some of the ransom. Cryptocurrencies rely on blockchain technology, a database shared across a network of computers, in which records are difficult to change once added. In a speech at the Munich Cyber Security Conference in Germany, Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco announced that Eun Young Choi, a prosecutor who led the case against a Russian hacker who helped steal information about more than 80 million JPMorgan & Chase Co customers, will lead the department's cryptocurrency enforcement team. Choi, who most recently served as Monaco's senior counsel, worked for nearly a decade as a cybercrime coordinator and assistant U.S. attorney in New York, according to her LinkedIn profile. the U.S. Attorney's Office in New York. «We are issuing a clear warning to criminals who
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