House lawmakers to hash out crypto, illicit finance as AML bills come into focus
Quick Take A panel focused on digital assets within the House Financial Services Committee will convene this afternoon for a hearing titled “Crypto Crime in Context Part ll: Examining Approaches to Combat Illicit Activity.”
A congressional hearing later today to hash out crypto's alleged role in illicit finance could be influential as anti-money laundering come into focus in Republican-led legislation.
A panel focused on digital assets within the House Financial Services Committee will convene this afternoon for a hearing titled "Crypto Crime in Context Part ll: Examining Approaches to Combat Illicit Activity." The subcommittee, led by Republican French Hill of Arkansas, will likely discuss how often terrorist groups turn to crypto to fund their operations compared to traditional finance as well as regulatory gaps in anti-money laundering requirements for crypto firms.
Lawmakers will hear from policy and legal experts from Circle, Coinbase, TRM Labs and others who plan to talk about how legislation should be shaped to go after bad actors, how the blockchain can be traced and how decentralized finance factors in, according to prepared testimonies.
The hearing comes as both Democrats and Republicans are honing in on AML provisions and bills. The full House Financial Services Committee advanced two bills last summer, one of which would take a comprehensive approach to regulate crypto. As of last month, Rep. Hill said that the larger bill includes an AML provision and signaled he was willing to listen to Democrats' ideas as well.
House Financial Services Committee Chair Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., has also said that the House needs to take a closer look at AML rules for crypto, according to a report from Punchbowl News in December.
On the other side of the aisle, Senate Democrats have been working on bills to fight against money laundering, including one from Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts that would expand AML responsibilities to digital asset services providers, miners, validators and others. Meanwhile Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, has said he is in talks about a bill that would target the use of digital assets for money laundering, according to Politico .
The hearing will start at 2 p.m. ET and be livestreamed on the committee's website .
Overstated
The House Financial Services Committee held a hearing yesterday to review work by the U.S. Treasury Department and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network where some lawmakers delved into crypto.
Treasury's Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson, who testified during that hearing, was asked about an October report from the Wall Street Journal that said Hamas, along with other militant groups used millions of dollars worth of crypto as a financing tool ahead of attacks in Israel. Data in that article came from blockchain forensics firm Elliptic, which has since said figures were misrepresented in the piece.
Nelson confirmed that the numbers in the article were overstated. When asked by Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., on how much crypto was used by Hamas, Nelson said he did not expect that figure to be very high.
"To be clear, Hamas is using crypto in relatively small amounts compared to what's been widely reported, that's correct?" Emmer said.
"That's our assessment," Nelson said.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
FUN drops by 32.34% within 24 hours as it faces a steep short-term downturn
- FUN plunged 32.34% in 24 hours to $0.008938, marking a 541.8% monthly loss amid prolonged bearish trends. - Technical breakdowns, elevated selling pressure, and forced liquidations highlight deteriorating market sentiment and risk-off behavior. - Analysts identify key support below $0.0080 as critical, with bearish momentum confirmed by RSI (<30) and MACD indicators. - A trend-following backtest strategy proposes short positions based on technical signals to capitalize on extended downward trajectories.

OPEN has dropped by 189.51% within 24 hours during a significant market pullback
- OPEN's price plummeted 189.51% in 24 hours to $0.8907, marking its largest intraday decline in history. - The token fell 3793.63% over 7 days, matching identical monthly and yearly declines, signaling severe bearish momentum. - Technical analysts cite broken support levels and lack of bullish catalysts as key drivers of the sustained sell-off. - Absence of stabilizing volume or reversal patterns leaves the market vulnerable to further downward pressure.

New spot margin trading pair — LINEA/USDT!
Bitget Live Trading Competition: Share 20,000+ USDT Prize Pool
Trending news
MoreCrypto prices
More








