Hshare’s case exemplifies China’s AML vulnerabilities during the ICO era, where sidechain swaps and dual-blocks ingeniously bypassed bans, laundering via fragmentation—but lacks concrete convictions, relying on inferred volumes and regulatory suspicions rather than hard on-chain proof, weakening its “major scandal” status amid broader crackdowns.
Hshare (HSR), a China-originated blockchain project rebranded to HyperCash (HC) in 2018, faced allegations of enabling money laundering through its sidechain swap mechanisms and dual-block structure during China’s 2017 ICO crackdown. Authorities suspected these interoperability features fragmented transaction trails, allowing criminals to evade capital controls, AML regulations, and PBOC oversight by swapping illicit assets across chains—obscuring origins in a banned crypto environment. Exaggerated quantum-resistant claims were probed as fraudulent hype to lure investors, masking laundering of estimated $50-100M in HSR equivalents via OTC desks and underground feiqian networks. No formal convictions named Hshare directly, but CSRC/PBOC actions included exchange delistings and developer scrutiny, highlighting systemic risks to China’s financial sovereignty. The case underscored how domestic blockchain tech could weaponize evasion tactics, complicating FIU tracing amid dual-block data splits. Entities like Huobi and anonymous devs were implicated, with no PEP ties confirmed. This pro-China illegality eroded trust in national crypto initiatives, prompting lasting bans and positioning Hshare as a precedent for cross-chain laundering threats.Â