Binance tells Senate probe no accounts sent crypto directly to Iran
TL;DR
Binance told a U.S. Senate panel its internal review found no direct transactions with Iranian entities, countering allegations of $1.7 billion in crypto flows to Iran-linked groups. The exchange said it found only indirect exposure to potentially Iran-linked wallets, removed associated accounts, and cooperated with law enforcement.
Key Takeaways
- •Binance's internal review found no evidence of direct transactions between its platform and Iranian entities, refuting allegations of $1.7 billion in crypto flows to Iran-linked groups.
- •The exchange identified only indirect exposure to potentially Iran-linked wallets, removed associated accounts (Hexa Whale and Blessed Trust), and cooperated with law enforcement inquiries.
- •Binance criticized media reports from outlets including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Fortune as 'false and defamatory' and rejected claims that compliance staff were pushed out after raising concerns.
- •The exchange's response came after Sen. Richard Blumenthal's investigation into whether Binance allowed funds to move to Iran-linked organizations, including Yemen's Houthi militants.
- •Binance emphasized its 'rigorous compliance program' and stated it investigates, mitigates, offboards accounts, and reports to authorities when credible risk information emerges.

What to know:
- Binance told a U.S. Senate panel that an internal review found no evidence of direct transactions between its platform and Iranian entities, countering allegations that $1.7 billion in crypto flowed to Iran-linked groups.
- In a March 6 letter to Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Binance said it found only indirect exposure to potentially Iran-linked wallets, removed the associated accounts and cooperated with law enforcement inquiries.
- The exchange criticized media reports from outlets including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Fortune, calling them false and defamatory, and rejected claims that compliance staff were pushed out after raising concerns.
- Binance told a U.S. Senate panel that an internal review found no evidence of direct transactions between its platform and Iranian entities, countering allegations that $1.7 billion in crypto flowed to Iran-linked groups.
- In a March 6 letter to Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Binance said it found only indirect exposure to potentially Iran-linked wallets, removed the associated accounts and cooperated with law enforcement inquiries.
- The exchange criticized media reports from outlets including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Fortune, calling them false and defamatory, and rejected claims that compliance staff were pushed out after raising concerns.
Binance, via its lawyers, told a U.S. Senate investigation it found no evidence that accounts on its platform transacted directly with Iranian entities, refuting allegations that $1.7 billion in crypto flowed through the exchange to Iran-linked groups.
In a March 6 letter responding to inquiries from Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s (D-Conn.) Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, the largest crypto exchange said an internal review found only indirect exposure to wallets that may have had links to Iran, and that accounts tied to the activity were removed.
Binance also attacked the media coverage that prompted the probe, calling reporting by outlets including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Fortune “demonstrably false” and “defamatory in several material respects.”
The response comes after Blumenthal opened an inquiry into whether the exchange allowed funds to move to Iran-linked organizations, including Yemen’s Houthi militants. The investigation followed media reports that internal Binance investigators had identified transactions tied to Iranian entities.
Binance said its review began after law enforcement contacted the company last April seeking information about transactions between Binance wallets and several external addresses that authorities said could be connected to terrorist financing.
According to the letter, the exchange provided user records and transaction information to investigators and continued examining the activity internally.
The exchange's lawyers said Binance identified two entities, Hexa Whale and Blessed Trust, whose accounts had interacted with the flagged wallets. Binance said it removed Hexa Whale from its platform in the following August and offboarded Blessed Trust in January after completing its investigations.
Binance also disputed reports that compliance investigators were dismissed after raising concerns, saying most departures were voluntary and that one employee was terminated for violating company policy on disclosing internal user information.
“When there is credible risk information, Binance investigates, mitigates, offboards accounts, and reports to appropriate authorities,” the letter said. "Binance has a rigorous compliance program that is consistently growing stronger."
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