The Coin Center has objected to a new Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) proposal categorizing certain cryptocurrency transactions as primary money laundering concerns.
The proposed ruling targets virtual currency mixing services, which aim to hide the source of funds. Coin Center argues the definition of mixing services is excessively broad, potentially restricting legitimate privacy measures and domestic transactions not under FinCEN’s authority.
In a letter, the Coin Center states the rule fails to differentiate between illegal foreign transactions and legal domestic activities adequately. They argue this extends FinCEN’s cancellation under anti-money laundering regulations like the PATRIOT Act.
There are also warnings that the rule risks violating if transactions are blocked without sufficient cause. Coin Center says law-abiding individuals and entities could face significant consequences.
Coin Center urges FinCEN to revise the rule to distinguish purely domestic transactions better and reconsider unintended impacts. They emphasize balancing money laundering risks with support for legal cryptocurrency use cases.
As conversations continue, the crypto community awaits the outcome of this regulatory process. The details of the ruling could shape the future landscape for privacy and innovation in digital currencies.
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