Law enforcement and industry leaders have seized over $300 million in crypto from cross-border fraud over the last year. Here’s how this happened.
Law enforcement agencies and private companies have joined forces to seize more than $300 million in crypto linked to fraud around the world. The effort combines blockchain analysis, targeted operations and cooperation between regulators and industry leaders.
Two major operations were involved in this crackdown, including the T3+ Global Collaborator Program, led by the T3 Financial Crime Unit (T3 FCU).
In collaboration, these agencies have frozen over $250 million in criminal assets since their launch in September of last year. A second set of operations, which was coordinated between the United States and Canada, recovered millions more from scams that targeted victims in multiple countries.
T3+ Program Freezes $250 Million in Criminal Crypto
The T3 FCU is a combined effort between blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs, TRON, Tether and Binance. This coalition started in September to track and stop fraudulent activity on the blockchain.
Over $300 million in cybercrime crypto seized in anti-fraud effort – @billtoulashttps://t.co/gjiMMMq6aQhttps://t.co/gjiMMMq6aQ
— BleepingComputer (@BleepinComputer) August 14, 2025
Since launch, the unit has analysed millions of transactions across five continents and monitored over $3 billion in transaction volume. The program has supported investigations into money laundering, investment fraud, extortion and even terrorism financing.
One of its biggest successes includes working with Binance to freeze $6 million from “romance baiting” scams. These kinds of scams lure victims into fake online relationships before convincing them to send funds to fake investment platforms.
North American Operations Target Cross-Border Scams
The second crackdown involved a combined effort between US and Canadian agencies with support from Chainalysis. This included two major operations called Project Atlas and Operation Avalanche.
Project Atlas, which was led by the Ontario Provincial Police, focused on cracking down on investment scams. It identified more than 2,000 crypto wallet addresses tied to fraud victims in 14 countries, including Canada, the US, Australia, Germany and the UK.
The team worked closely with Tether to blacklist over $50 million in USDT. This stopped scammers from moving or cashing out on stilen assets. Officials even estimate that the project prevented an extra $70 million from being stolen.
Operation Avalanche, which was led by the British Columbia Securities Commission, targeted Ethereum-based fraud schemes. Investigators identified $4.3 million in losses and worked with multiple police departments in Canada to freeze funds.
Fraud Remains a Major Issue in Crypto
Despite these successes, experts are warning that fraud is still a widespread crime in the crypto market.
According to Natalie Newson, Senior Blockchain Investigator at CertiK, Ponzi schemes are still common due to the decentralised nature of blockchain. She advises investors to be cautious with “investment opportunities” that lack clear details or fail to register with regulators.
Scammers tend to exploit gaps in enforcement, especially in countries where crypto rules are still developing.
Overall, the recent freeze of over $300 million in stolen crypto sends a strong message to cybercriminals. It also shows that law enforcement has improved massively over the last decade.
Victims also have hope of recovering their stolen funds, and with new scams showing up constantly, experts believe such partnerships will continue to be important over the years.