The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
The rise of decentralized finance (DeFi) has ushered in unprecedented innovation—and new criminal frontiers. The latest 2025 Cross-Chain Crime Report from Elliptic, a leader in blockchain analytics, provides a data-driven examination of how illicit actors are exploiting an increasingly multichain crypto universe. The findings reveal not only staggering volumes of cross-chain laundering but also the rapidly evolving tools and tactics of criminal organizations.
Austrian prosecutors have filed the first formal charges against real estate tycoon René Benko for fraudulent asset transfers worth €660,000 during bankruptcy proceedings, marking a watershed moment in what may become Europe's largest financial crime prosecution. The charges reveal a sophisticated network of investment bankers and mysterious entities that helped shield billions in assets before the €14 billion Signa empire's collapse, with implications extending far beyond Austria's borders.
Roman Storm, co-founder of Tornado Cash, faces trial in New York for allegedly enabling over $1 billion in money laundering, including funds tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The case, echoing a Dutch conviction of another developer, questions whether coding decentralized tools is a crime or protected speech. Will Storm’s trial redefine crypto innovation?
On July 13, 2025, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and FinTelegram published a report detailing the arrest of Dmitry Artyakov, son of Vladimir Artyakov, a high-ranking Russian defense official and Vice President of Rostec, by Spanish police in Girona. The arrest centers on allegations of money laundering through the purchase of luxury real estate, with funds purportedly linked to the Troika Laundromat scheme—a $4.8 billion operation uncovered by OCCRP in 2019.
The European Union is in turmoil as a dramatic campaign unfolds within the European Parliament to remove Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. This unprecedented political storm is fueled by allegations of corruption, secretive dealings with Big Pharma, and a stunning rebuke from the EU’s own judiciary. The controversy has reached fever pitch, with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán publicly calling for von der Leyen’s resignation and a no-confidence vote looming in Strasbourg.
In our breaking news, Fintelegram has learned that a Cointed shareholder has confirmed that the companies executives knew about the Optioment scam. The shareholder claimed to have collected evidence against Cointed co-founder Christopher Rieder “for months”.
Optioment is one of the largest crypto-scams in Europe with about €100 million investors paid into the scheme. It developed into an international criminal case with Austrian crypto-entrepreneur, Christopher Rieder and his crypto company Cointed involved as suspects. It appears that Cointed’s ATM and exchange services were used to transfer investors funds to Optioment and funneled back for Cointed’s expansion.
Charli AHO, COINTED shareholder, and officer confirmed the $100 million fraud
FinTelegram has been reporting on the COINTED case since March 2018 and has repeatedly pointed out the obvious problems and inconsistencies. Whoever wanted to see them, saw them. However, many people were distracted by the fairy dust that lay above the crypto world back then. Everyone wanted to have a share of the crypto world and COINTED had a wide range to offer to investors: crypto-ATMs, mining, and online exchange offices. A one-stop shop for crypto-investors.
The COINTED founder Christopher RIEDER is listed as a suspect in the collapsed crypto-MLM scheme OPTIOMENT. He has been accused by 3 key distributors of the fraudulent scheme – the so-called 3 Optioment Musketeers – that for them he was the mastermind of this system. In fact, RIEDER confirmed in a statement to the Austrian prosecutors that he had presented the OPTIOMENT system to the 3 musketeers in a BitClub network meeting . This is reported by the Austrian STANDARD and had been confirmed to us by an involved lawyer. He argued that he would not have been involved with the scheme, but would have been approached by the two Bitcoin people Lucas MAZUR and Alex POPOV, the actual operators of OPTIOMENT. The problem with this – MAZUR and POPOV are not real people and at best pseudonyms. But it may well be that the two persons do not exist at all.
So far COINTED and the other shareholders Wolfgang THALER, Charli AHO and Daniil ORLOV have always denied that they might have even known something about OPTIOMENT scheme. They allegedly never heard about it. This has now changed radically! Suddenly, they remember and point their fingers at Christopher RIEDER. FinTelegram was informed that one of the COINTED shareholders had already collected and found evidence against Christopher RIEDER for months. Allegedly, he is able to prove that RIEDER had made about USD 100 million disappear. Allegedly, Christopher RIEDER would be in Turkey and would spend a lot of money there to escape extradition to Austria (possible on the basis of an international arrest warrant which the court so far refused to issue for whatevwr reason).
The notorious GoMoPa news portal confirms again possible connections between COINTED and the German diplomat Stephan WELK. Maybe we have the connection to MAZUR and POPOV?
Stay tuned, we will continue reporting!
All Telegrams in the Cointed / Optioment Investigation