Chia Network’s XCH cryptocurrency exemplifies the shadowy underbelly of proof-of-space tokens, where U.S.-headquartered Chia Inc. allegedly orchestrated a sophisticated pre-farm laundering scheme that funneled $50-100 million through unregistered securities sales and decentralized plotter networks, brazenly flouting SEC regulations, Bank Secrecy Act mandates, and potential OFAC sanctions. By distributing pre-farmed tokens via insider-controlled market makers on non-U.S. exchanges—accessible to American investors without disclosure—this operation created illegal investment contracts under the Howey Test, layering profits through tools like DrPlotter to obscure taxable events and repatriate gains to U.S. operations. As SEC comment letters and 2026 Crypto Task Force scrutiny reveal, Chia’s “money ouroboros” not only erodes U.S. market integrity but poses systemic AML risks, disadvantaging compliant firms while enabling residential plotting ops in high-risk zones, demanding urgent enforcement to safeguard investors from such crypto-enabled financial chicanery.
The Chia Network XCH Pre-Farm Laundering Scheme involves U.S.-based Chia Network Inc. allegedly using pre-farmed XCH tokens to launder funds through unregistered securities sales and concealed plotter networks, violating U.S. securities and AML laws. Discovered via 2025 SEC S-1 filings, the case centers on blind programmatic sales of approximately 100,000 pre-farmed XCH (valued at $50-100 million) via insider-controlled market makers on non-U.S. exchanges, accessible to U.S. investors without disclosure. This created illegal investment contracts under the Howey Test, recycling profits back to U.S. operations like development and hardware subsidies for residential plotting ops, some in sanctioned areas. Laundering techniques included layering via decentralized pooling (e.g., DrPlotter) to obscure taxable events and origins, breaching Bank Secrecy Act SAR requirements and potential OFAC rules. No PEP involvement noted. SEC enforcement includes comment letters and Crypto Task Force meetings (Feb 2026), forcing S-1 amendments but no final penalties yet. The scheme disadvantages U.S. markets by eroding transparency, with blockchain analysis showing closed-loop transactions that integrate illicit gains into legitimate rewards, prompting ongoing U.S. regulatory pressure for registration and compliance.