Global enforcement in cryptocurrency markets has shifted decisively toward targeting individuals, tightening coordination across borders, and relying on private analytics and stablecoin controls, according to developments between 2022 and 2026. The transition marks a move away from sanctioning code alone toward holding operators and developers accountable, even as illicit activity remains elevated and legal clarity lags in key jurisdictions.
Enforcement pivots toward individuals and operators
The turning point came after the Tornado Cash case. In 2022, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned 44 smart contract addresses, marking the first major attempt to blacklist code rather than people. Despite restrictions, the protocol continued processing more than $2.5 billion on-chain.
A 2024 U.S. appellate ruling later found that immutable smart contracts do not qualify as “property” under IEEPA, leading to Tornado Cash being removed from the sanctions list in 2025. However, prosecutors did not retreat. Attention shifted to developers, with Roman Storm facing a retrial scheduled for October 2026 after an initial jury deadlock. The outcome could redefine legal exposure for open-source contributors.
This strategy has already taken shape in other cases. The creators of Samourai Wallet pleaded guilty in 2025, with courts accepting the argument that their product operated as a commercial service rather than neutral software. That distinction is now forming a new legal boundary between decentralized code and managed platforms.
Global crackdowns intensify despite mixed results
Enforcement expanded rapidly across jurisdictions. U.S. and European authorities coordinated actions against mixing services, while Germany’s BKA dismantled Garantex in 2025 and U.S. authorities seized hundreds of millions linked to Helix in early 2026. More recently, a multinational operation targeted the AudiA6 mixer, arresting alleged operators tied to roughly $390 million in laundering activity.
Yet the broader impact remains limited. North Korean groups alone accounted for billions in theft, including a $1.5 billion incident in 2025 and roughly $2 billion stolen that year. Total illicit crypto activity estimates for 2024 range between $45 billion and $51 billion, according to blockchain analytics firms. Sanctioned entities were responsible for 68% of illicit flows, indicating that blacklists struggle against state-backed operations.
Analytics firms and stablecoins become enforcement backbone
Private analytics platforms have become central to enforcement infrastructure. Companies such as Chainalysis, TRM Labs, Elliptic, and Merkle Science now provide intelligence to more than 1,500 institutions, linking over 1 billion wallet addresses to known entities. Chainalysis alone controls roughly 45% of the market.
At the same time, stablecoin issuers have emerged as powerful gatekeepers. Tether has frozen over $4.4 billion in assets as of mid-2026, including more than $2.1 billion tied to U.S. enforcement requests. In 2025 alone, it froze $1.26 billion and destroyed $698 million, blacklisting thousands of addresses with minimal reinstatement.
These mechanisms form a rapid enforcement loop where flagged wallets are identified, funds frozen, exchange access blocked, and fiat off-ramps shut down within hours. However, the process remains opaque, with limited avenues for appeal and significant discretionary power held by private entities.
Regulatory divergence shapes global market structure
Regulatory clarity varies sharply by region. The European Union has fully implemented its MiCA framework, creating standardized rules for service providers and stablecoin issuers across all member states. The regime introduces licensing, reserve transparency, and expanded anti-money laundering oversight, offering a predictable environment for traders.
In contrast, the United States remains fragmented. The CLARITY Act passed the House in 2025 but has stalled in the Senate, leaving agencies like the SEC and CFTC in ongoing jurisdictional disputes. Court rulings have further complicated enforcement consistency.
Asia is moving toward structured oversight. Hong Kong began issuing stablecoin licenses in 2026, favoring large financial institutions. South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act mandates safeguards such as asset segregation and insurance, while Japan and Singapore continue refining regulated channels. Regulators, including the FATF, increasingly view non-custodial wallets as a key vulnerability.
Structural changes redefine enforcement landscape
Four major shifts characterize the current environment:
- Enforcement has moved from static blacklists to dynamic, risk-based monitoring
- Coordination has shifted from national to multilateral efforts
- Legal focus has moved from protocols to operators and developers
- Control has evolved into a shared system involving regulators, analytics firms, and stablecoin issuers
Each shift increases precision but raises concerns about oversight, due process, and the concentration of power in private systems.
Outlook: rising legal risk and compliance pressure
The cumulative effect is a market where legal exposure is increasingly tied to behavior rather than technology alone. Developers face growing scrutiny, while traders encounter faster and more definitive enforcement actions when interacting with flagged addresses.
The unresolved case against Tornado Cash’s developer remains a critical test. A conviction could establish a precedent that extends liability across the open-source ecosystem. At the same time, continued coordination among governments and corporations suggests that enforcement will become faster and more pervasive, even as illicit activity adapts and persists.
For deeper insight into shifting crypto laws and compliance, explore how global crypto laws are shaping investor security.
Disclaimer: The content on this page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not represent the views or financial advice of Toobit. We make no guarantees regarding the accuracy or completeness of this information and shall not be held liable for any errors, omissions, or outcomes resulting from its use. Investing in digital assets involves risk; users should independently evaluate their financial situation and the risks involved. For further details, please consult our Terms of Service and Risk Disclosure.

