Government Scrutiny of Cryptocurrency Exchanges over Large-Scale Money Laundering

Context:

  • India has intensified its crackdown on cryptocurrency-linked financial crimes, with multiple central agencies examining the misuse of digital asset platforms.

  • The action follows the detection of large-scale cyber fraud and money laundering routed through crypto exchanges, raising concerns over regulatory compliance, internal security, and governance gaps.

Key Highlights:

Government Action / Institutional Oversight

  • The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) flagged 27 cryptocurrency exchanges for their alleged role in laundering ₹623.63 crore.

  • The laundering involved 2,872 victims during the period January 2024 to September 2025.

  • Data inputs were provided by the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C).

  • Investigations are being conducted by:

    • Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU-IND)

    • Enforcement Directorate (ED)

Modus Operandi of Cybercriminals

  • Victims were lured into investing through fake trading and investment apps.

  • Funds collected were:

    • Converted into cryptocurrencies

    • Transferred across multiple digital wallets (layering)

    • Routed through various exchanges to obscure money trails

  • Authorities suspect the use of “crypto mules”—intermediaries who convert scam proceeds into digital tokens.

Exchanges Under Scanner

  • Crypto platforms with significant market share were flagged, including:

    • CoinDCX

    • WazirX

    • Giottus

    • ZebPay

    • Mudrex

    • CoinSwitch

  • Several of these exchanges are registered with FIU-IND but are under scrutiny for KYC and AML compliance failures.

Industry Response and Structural Concerns

  • Some exchanges claim:

    • They only facilitate lawful trading

    • KYC/AML gaps were rectified post-FIU registration in 2023

  • Cybersecurity breaches, notably the WazirX hacking incident (July 2024), have:

    • Eroded user confidence

    • Pushed exchanges to adopt asset custodians, insurance covers, and stronger safeguards

  • Many Indian crypto platforms have foreign holding company structures, citing:

    • Ease of capital raising

    • Regulatory uncertainty in India

Taxation and Trust Deficit

  • The Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI) reported:

    • ₹824.14 crore GST evasion by 17 crypto exchanges

    • ₹122.29 crore recovered by December 2024

  • This has deepened the trust deficit between the government and the crypto industry.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS Paper 2 (Governance):

    • Regulatory oversight

    • Institutional coordination in financial governance

  • GS Paper 3 (Economy):

    • Digital economy

    • Financial regulation and taxation

  • GS Paper 3 (Internal Security):

    • Cybercrime

    • Money laundering through emerging technologies

  • Prelims:

    • Crypto regulation

    • FIU, ED, I4C

    • KYC and AML frameworks

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