$450M Frozen And Counting: Tether-Backed T3 Financial Crime Unit Expands Global Crackdown On Illicit Crypto Flows
In Brief
Tether’s T3 FCU has frozen over $450M in illicit crypto assets globally, expanding cooperation with law enforcement and boosting efforts against fraud, hacks, and illicit blockchain activity worldwide.

Financial technology company Tether announced that the T3 Financial Crime Unit (T3 FCU), a collaborative initiative involving Tether, TRON, and TRM Labs, has frozen more than $450 million in illicit digital assets worldwide as part of ongoing efforts to combat cryptocurrency-related financial crime and strengthen cooperation with regulatory and law enforcement authorities.
The organisation stated that during 2025 the unit has supported investigations linked to a broad range of criminal activities, including cases involving controlled substances, exchange breaches and exploits, activity associated with North Korea-linked entities, terrorist financing operations, violent offences, kidnappings, extortion schemes, and so-called wrench attacks involving physical coercion targeting crypto holders.
According to the announcement, T3 FCU intercepted 43.9% more illicit proceeds in 2025 compared with the previous year. Authorities in jurisdictions including the United States, Spain, Germany, the Netherlands, and Bulgaria were identified as among the most active participants in efforts to block illicit financial flows measured by blacklisted transaction volume.
Tether described the initiative as an increasingly important component of the broader digital asset compliance framework, arguing that the unit’s ability to identify and freeze suspicious funds before criminal activity escalates has contributed to reducing illicit blockchain activity while supporting legitimate digital asset usage. The initiative operates as a coordination mechanism between private sector blockchain infrastructure providers and public enforcement agencies, enabling rapid intervention in suspicious transactions.
Global Enforcement Coordination Expands Across Crypto Sector
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) previously referenced T3 FCU in public reporting earlier this year, describing the initiative as an “invaluable resource for law enforcement agencies worldwide.” FATF highlighted the unit alongside TRM Labs’ Beacon Network as an example of public-private cooperation frameworks designed to address illicit activity within the digital asset sector. The announcement noted that global illicit cryptocurrency flows reached an estimated $158 billion, reinforcing demand for systems capable of rapidly identifying, freezing, and disrupting criminal transactions in real time.
T3 FCU initially emerged as a communication and blocklisting framework focused on the misuse of USDT on the TRON blockchain. The unit stated that it has been able to identify suspicious transfers and freeze assets within 24 hours during multiple incidents involving account compromises and violent criminal activity following requests from law enforcement agencies.
The initiative also referenced participation in Operation Lusocoin, a large-scale investigation led by the Brazilian Federal Police. In coordination with local authorities and financial institutions, the operation reportedly resulted in the freezing of more than R$3 billion in cryptocurrency-related assets, including approximately 4.3 million USDT associated with the investigated network. The operation was presented as an example of cross-border collaboration between public institutions and blockchain industry participants aimed at improving financial security and transparency.
Since launching in 2024, T3 FCU has expanded into what the participating organisations describe as a global enforcement framework focused on detecting and disrupting illicit financial activity across the digital asset ecosystem. The initiative reports having analysed millions of blockchain transactions spanning five continents in efforts to identify fraud, laundering activity, exploits, and other criminal fund movements, while coordinating asset freezes where required.
The unit currently operates in collaboration with regulatory bodies and government agencies across 23 jurisdictions, including the United States, Spain, Germany, Brazil, and the United Kingdom, reflecting an increasingly international approach to blockchain-related financial enforcement and compliance oversight.
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About The Author
Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.
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Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.



