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唐朱昌
唐朱昌
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嚴立新
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陳浩然
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復旦大學法學院教授、博士生導師;復旦大學國際刑法研究中心主任。...
何 萍
何 萍
華東政法大學刑法學教授,復旦大學中國反洗錢研究中心特聘研究員,荷...
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周錦賢
周錦賢
周錦賢先生,香港人,廣州暨南大學法律學士,復旦大學中國反洗錢研究中...
童文俊
童文俊
高級經濟師,復旦大學金融學博士,復旦大學經濟學博士后。現供職于中...
湯 俊
湯 俊
武漢中南財經政法大學信息安全學院教授。長期專注于反洗錢/反恐...
李 剛
李 剛
生辰:1977.7.26 籍貫:遼寧撫順 民族:漢 黨派:九三學社 職稱:教授 研究...
祝亞雄
祝亞雄
祝亞雄,1974年生,浙江衢州人。浙江師范大學經濟與管理學院副教授,博...
顧卿華
顧卿華
復旦大學中國反洗錢研究中心特聘研究員;現任安永管理咨詢服務合伙...
張平
張平
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轉發
上傳時間: 2024-08-21      瀏覽次數:354次
China supreme court revises Anti-Money Laundering law to include ‘virtual assets’

 

https://cointelegraph.com/news/china-revises-anti-money-laundering-law-include-crypto

 

China’s supreme court and public prosecutor have revised their interpretation of the country’s Anti-Money Laundering (AML) laws to recognize “virtual asset” transactions for the first time.

 

The country adopted its existing AML law on Jan. 1, 2007, making the latest revision its first significant update in almost two decades.

 

In an Aug. 19 conference, the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate said under their new interpretation of the law, “virtual asset” transactions are now listed as one of the recognized money laundering methods.

 

It comes amid recent speculation on X that the country could be looking to unban crypto soon — though many are skeptical about it.

 

According to the courts, the transfer and conversion of criminal proceeds through digital transactions will now be covered under regulations that prohibit “covering up and concealing the source and nature of criminal proceeds and their benefits by other means.”

 

Lawbreakers face penalties ranging from a minimum of 10,000 Chinese yuan ($1,400) to 200,000 yuan ($28,000) for more severe offenses. Offenders could also face jail terms of between five and 10 years. 

 

The other amendments include clearer guidelines around “serious circumstances” in money laundering cases, such as refusal to cooperate with authorities or if the amount being laundered is more than 5 million yuan ($700,000).

 

The Supreme People’s Procuratorate said that 2,971 people were prosecuted for money laundering in 2023, a 20-fold increase from 2019.

 

Debate whether China is unbanning crypto

 

It comes amid speculation from a few industry executives that China could be looking to reverse its crypto ban.

 

In a now-deleted July 14 X post, Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz posted that he heard reports suggesting China is “likely to unban” Bitcoin On Aug. 19, Justin Sun, founder of Tron and crypto exchange HTX, added fuel to the fire after posting a throwaway comment on X asking what the best meme to suit China’s unbanning of crypto would be.

 

However, several experts have also thrown cold water on the idea.

 

In July, Yifan He, CEO of major Chinese blockchain firm Red Date Technology, said he didn’t think China would ever allow its citizens to freely trade Bitcoin using local fiat currency.

 

Mikko Ohtamaa, the co-founder of algorithmic investment protocol Trading Strategy, agreed, saying a u-turn from China on crypto would directly oppose the government’s political agenda.

 

The country implemented a ban on crypto exchanges in 2017 and an interdepartmental crackdown on crypto in 2021.

 

Qingdao police crackdown on $1.1 million USDT money laundering biz

 

According to a Chinese media report, Qingdao police are currently prosecuting a case involving a network caught using stablecoin Tether to launder over 8 million yuan ($1.1 million) for criminal enterprises.

 

Officials allege the three primary individuals involved enlisted friends to use their business licenses and identification documents to open public accounts, which were used to receive money from criminals interested in laundering their ill-gotten gains.

 

The money was then converted into USDT and transferred back to criminals, with the money laundering syndicate receiving a commission for their efforts. Nine people are currently facing criminal charges and awaiting prosecution over the matter.