The Counter Extremism Project, a non-profit, non-governmental organization that combats extremist groups, believes that as much as $300 million (1.1 billion dirhams) worth of donations made to ISIS could be hidden in cryptocurrency.
The organization’s new report, titled “Cryptocurrencies and Financing of Terrorism: Threat Assessment and Regulatory Challenges,” said that authorities have been searching for this missing war chest since 2017.
“I’m wondering if from 2017 to 2020 there has been $300 million that we have not found and that’s why I’m thinking this might have been one of the ways it might have been used,” the think tank’s director Hans-Jakob Schindler told The National, adding that “This would be an ideal storage mechanism until it is needed. If done right, it would be unfindable and unseizable for most governments.”
In 2019, ISIS reportedly used cryptocurrency to organize the Easter Sunday terrorist attack in Sri Lanka. Over 250 people were killed at the time as suicide bombers attacked churches and hotels.
ISIS is also considered the first terrorist group that was officially prosecuted in court for its cryptocurrency activities. In 2015, a US teenager Ali Shukri Amin was sentenced to 11 years in jail for providing its supporters with a manual on how to conceal donations with Bitcoin.
A US woman was on Friday sentenced to 13 years in prison for sending over $150,000 to terrorist organization ISIS—much of it in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
Zoobia Shahnaz, of Long Island, New York, pleaded guilty in November 2018 for providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
The Department of Justice announced yesterday that Shahnaz sent over $150,000 to people and groups in Pakistan, China, and Turkey that were affiliated with ISIS. The money had been raised frau...
As Decrypt reported in March, a US woman was also sentenced to 13 years in prison for sending over $150,000 to ISIS—much of it in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
Yet it looks like various terrorist groups have been dabbling in crypto even earlier, as there are “consistent cases” of ISIS and Hamas using cryptocurrencies as far back as 2014, Schindler said.
“From the get-go, ISIS has been clearly interested in what can be done with this new technology,” he said, explaining that, “Cryptocurrency is good for terrorists if they become public because it enables more people to fund them without running the risk of being discovered or stopped.”
.@FightExtremism teamed up with @Integrity_Risk to analyze the challenges that cryptocurrency presents for the fight against financing of terrorism & what steps authorities, in particular in Germany and Europe, should take to counter this growing risk. https://t.co/INEwOMf0EU
Schindler also said that EU governments must create a joint regulatory framework since they “for once can be ahead of the curve and have time now to work on regulations before it becomes a $100 million problem.”
Last summer, a research paper written by Steven Stalinsky, the executive director of the Middle East Media Research Institute, suggested that crypto fundraising for terrorist organizations is becoming more common, as groups look for ways to raise cash bypassing banks and other intermediaries.
In November 2019, officials from the Australian and US governments have also called for further action against the national security threats posed by cryptocurrencies.
Daily Debrief Newsletter
Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.
Crypto's best minds are heading east, and it's gaining at a pace that other regions are finding hard to catch up to.
Asia was responsible for 32% of global crypto developer activity in 2024, according to a report from venture firm Electric Capital. The firm recently published its comprehensive annual report, analyzing over 900 million code commits across the crypto industry.
The transformation represents a nearly threefold increase from Asia's 12% share in 2015, while North America's position de...
Google's announcement of its breakthrough Willow quantum processor has reignited debates about crypto security, with some observers suggesting quantum computers could break Bitcoin's encryption.
The tech giant claims its new quantum computing chip can complete certain calculations in five minutes, which would take traditional supercomputers an impractical amount of time to process.
Quantum computing is a new type of computing that uses the strange properties of quantum physics, where small part...
Dimo, a platform for developers to build apps and enable car drivers to monetize their data, is migrating between Ethereum scaling networks, the developers exclusively told Decrypt—from Polygon to Coinbase’s Base. Co-founder Rob Solomon believes the move opens doors for valuable partnerships ahead.
The project is a “global API layer for cars” that is aiming to make every car on earth smart and programmable. This could manifest, the company says, in a future full of AI car mechanics and smart par...