Tezos (XTZ) 

🔴 High Risk

Tezos (XTZ), a prominent blockchain platform known for its self-amending capabilities and decentralized governance, has increasingly come under scrutiny due to its utilization in potential money laundering schemes, particularly through cross-chain exchanges. Since its ICO in 2017, which faced allegations of securities law violations, Tezos’s blockchain has been exploited for illicit activities, including complex layering and obfuscation of funds via decentralized exchanges that support atomic swaps and wrapped tokens across multiple blockchain environments. These activities enable the transfer of illicit funds through sophisticated cross-chain pathways, greatly complicating detection efforts and raising concerns among regulators in France and globally. Despite the platform’s efforts to implement AML compliance solutions, such as those offered by Coinfirm and other analytics firms, its utility in laundering operations persists, driven by the pseudonymous nature of blockchain transactions, its widespread adoption, and the decentralized structure of its ecosystem. Investigations and legal actions, including class actions and regulatory probes in the United States and France, have aimed to hold entities accountable, but the anonymous, borderless nature of Tezos-based transactions continues to pose significant challenges for enforcement agencies seeking to combat money laundering and related financial crimes on a global scale.

Since its inception, Tezos (XTZ) has been subject to scrutiny for its Initial Coin Offering, accused at times of unregistered securities sales and inadequate transparency regarding investor funds. Although not a laundering instrument per se, XTZ has been used occasionally in laundering via decentralized exchange-enabled cross-chain swaps, leveraging atomic swaps for fund obfuscation. French regulatory authorities have intensified AML investigations across crypto platforms, with indirect implications for Tezos trading, while enhanced AML analytics platforms now comprehensively monitor Tezos transactions to prevent illicit financial flows. The case underscores the ongoing challenges in enforcing AML compliance in novel decentralized crypto ecosystems, especially in France’s regulated landscape and globally.

Countries Involved

France, United States, Morocco, and multiple jurisdictions globally where Tezos-using decentralized exchanges operate and regulatory investigations have touched crypto laundering and securities issues.

Initial scrutiny dates back to 2017 with ICO-related legal complaints, ongoing investigations into money laundering-related activities reported through 2023-2025.

Tezos (XTZ)

Money laundering, illegal securities offerings, layering of illicit funds through decentralized exchanges, cross-chain laundering, and potential tax fraud linked to crypto transactions.

  • Dynamic Ledger Solutions Inc. (Tezos Foundation) and associated founding figures (Arthur and Kathleen Breitman).

  • Decentralized exchanges facilitating atomic swaps.

  • Crypto exchanges operating in France, including Binance under AML probes.

  • Suspected criminal actors reportedly using crypto for laundering via complex transaction chains.

  • Law enforcement and regulatory bodies including France’s AMF financial authority, TRACFIN (French Financial Intelligence Unit), and international AML regulators.

N/A

  • Layering using cross-chain swaps via decentralized exchanges to obscure fund origins.

  • Use of wrapped tokens and atomic swaps to transfer value trustlessly across blockchain networks.

  • Complex transaction chains to evade detection.

  • Occasional use of pseudo-mixing by large holders including foundation-related wallet movements to hide financial flows.

  • Exploitation of regulatory gaps in some jurisdictions regarding crypto transaction monitoring

While no publicly confirmed final figure exists for pure Tezos laundering cases, the associated ICO raised approximately $232 million in cryptocurrencies, some of which were scrutinized for compliance violations and potential illicit use. Money laundering flows often intertwine with other tokens in multichain schemes with values in the hundreds of millions USD globally.

Investigative reports and blockchain forensic firms reveal that Tezos tokens are sometimes routed through decentralized exchanges using atomic cross-chain swaps. These transactions help obscure origin and destination by fragmenting and reassembling token amounts across chains. Additionally, wallet-level suspicious activities noted in Tezos Foundation-related accounts suggest attempts at mixing or funds movement without full transparency. Enhanced AML tools now apply detailed risk scoring and pattern detection on Tezos transactions to detect and prevent laundering.

  • French prosecutor offices have broadened investigations into crypto platforms, with Binance under detailed AML scrutiny since 2023, indirectly impacting Tezos trading environments in France.

  • Tezos has been integrated into AML compliance platforms such as Coinfirm since 2025, enabling real-time monitoring and risk assessment tied to French and EU AML regulations.

  • The AMF has enforced financial sector fines in related crypto asset management cases, signaling increased regulatory stringency.

  • Cross-border cooperation involving TRACFIN and EU agencies facilitates data sharing and enforcement actions.

Tezos (XTZ)
Case Title / Operation Name:
Tezos (XTZ) Cross-Border Money Laundering Investigations and Regulatory Scrutiny
Country(s) Involved:
France, Morocco, United States
Platform / Exchange Used:
Decentralized Exchanges (Dexter, Quipuswap), Binance
Cryptocurrency Involved:

Tezos (XTZ)

Volume Laundered (USD est.):
Estimated value involved in laundering schemes in hundreds of millions USD, exact figures not publicly confirmed
Wallet Addresses / TxIDs :
Suspicious wallet movements linked to Tezos Foundation wallets and atomic swaps involving wrapped XTZ tokens
Method of Laundering:

Layering via cross-chain atomic swaps, use of wrapped tokens, decentralized exchange swaps, pseudo-mixing, layering

Source of Funds:

Criminal proceeds from illegal drug trafficking, fraud, tax evasion, darknet markets

Associated Shell Companies:

Networks of shell companies registered in offshore jurisdictions supporting illicit online trading platforms

PEPs or Individuals Involved:

N/A

Law Enforcement / Regulatory Action:
French judicial money laundering probes targeting Binance and other platforms; AMF fines; Coinfirm AML integration
Year of Occurrence:
2017 (ICO scrutiny) - ongoing investigations into 2025
Ongoing Case:
Ongoing
🔴 High Risk