The U.S. Department of Justice is disbanding its National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (NCET) and narrowing its crypto enforcement priorities to cases involving terrorism, narcotics, and cartel-related activity.
As reported by Reuters, the DOJ memo also instructs prosecutors to deprioritize investigations into virtual asset service providers – such as exchanges, mixers, and wallet platforms – unless there is clear evidence of willful violations. Ongoing cases that donโt align with the new directive are to be closed.
This marks a significant shift in the U.S. federal approach to crypto-related crime. From an investigative perspective, the change raises several important considerations:
๐น Narrowing the scope of crypto enforcement may reduce visibility into broader laundering infrastructures that facilitate illicit flows.
๐น Disbanding NCET could affect coordination in complex, cross-border investigations, where U.S. leadership and data-sharing have often played a central role.
๐น For victims of hacks, fraud, and theft, the absence of a centralized DOJ unit may add complexity to the asset recovery process.
While targeting high-impact criminal conduct remains essential, this evolving regulatory landscape underscores the growing importance of private-sector investigations and legal collaboration in tracing assets and supporting enforcement.
As enforcement strategies shift, maintaining robust public-private partnerships will be key to detecting illicit activity and protecting the integrity of blockchain ecosystems.
๐ Reuters article: https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-justice-dept-disbands-cryptocurrency-enforcement-unit-2025-04-08/?