MakerDAO’s DAI stablecoin exemplifies the profound AML vulnerabilities inherent in decentralized finance, where billions in pseudonymously transacted value evade traditional oversight, posing acute challenges for US regulators amid escalating geopolitical tensions. As a cornerstone of DeFi with over $5 billion in circulation, DAI’s algorithmic overcollateralization—governed by MKR token holders without centralized KYC—enables seamless laundering of ransomware proceeds and sanctioned funds, as evidenced by post-FTX hack flows exceeding $450 million and annual illicit volumes topping $200 million. The absence of freeze mechanisms until the 2025 Sky rebrand underscores a critical regulatory arbitrage, flouting BSA requirements and the GENIUS Act’s mandates for licensing and compliance, while exposing RWA integrations to blacklisting risks. This case not only highlights DeFi’s “decentralization illusion” but demands hybrid solutions blending on-chain forensics with DAO accountability to safeguard global financial integrity against crypto-enabled crime.
MakerDAO’s DAI stablecoin, governed by MKR holders in a decentralized manner, has facilitated over $1 billion in suspected money laundering since 2022, primarily through DeFi protocols lacking centralized AML oversight. Criminals, including FTX hackers and ransomware operators, convert seized USDT/USDC into DAI via DEXes like Uniswap to evade OFAC freezes, then deposit as collateral in Maker CDPs to mint leveraged loans, repay with obfuscated funds, and abandon positions. This exploits DAI’s algorithmic stability and permissionless access, with annual illicit volumes hitting $200-500 million per Chainalysis estimates. The US, as the key jurisdiction, responded via the 2025 GENIUS Act mandating stablecoin licensing, reserves, and freezing capabilities. MakerDAO’s August 2025 Sky rebrand introduced USDS with compliance tools, addressing prior vulnerabilities but highlighting DeFi’s systemic AML gaps. No PEP involvement noted; focus remains on cybercriminals. On-chain analysis reveals clustered wallets processing billions pseudonymously, underscoring regulatory challenges for DAOs. Enforcement includes sanctions discussions and analytics-driven tracing, yet full remediation eludes due to decentralization. This case exemplifies stablecoin risks in US geopolitics and financial crime landscapes.