A new report alleges Binance facilitated millions of dollars in transactions for suspicious accounts months after its historic $4.3 billion plea deal with the U.S. Department of Justice. The findings suggest that the exchange’s compliance overhaul remains porous despite the imposition of a federal monitor.
The Compliance Gap
The transactions in question reportedly occurred after the November 2023 settlement. That agreement required Binance to exit the U.S. market and implement rigorous anti-money laundering (AML) controls. Yet, data indicates accounts linked to sanctioned entities and illicit finance operations continued to move funds through the platform.
This breach strikes at the core of the DOJ’s corrective strategy. The agency appointed Forensic Risk Alliance (FRA) as an independent monitor specifically to detect such failures. If verified, these lapses could empower U.S. prosecutors to extend the monitorship or levy additional penalties.
The continued flow of illicit funds raises questions about the efficacy of the new oversight measures installed post-settlement.
Market Reaction
BNB showed resilience despite the regulatory noise. The token traded flat at $595, holding its support levels as traders awaited official comments from the exchange or the DOJ. Volume remained thin. The market appears to have priced in ongoing regulatory friction as a baseline operational cost for the exchange.
Institutional Context
Regulators are watching. The Department of Justice retains the ability to prosecute Binance for the original charges if the exchange violates the terms of its three-year probation. A confirmed failure to block sanctioned wallets would be a material breach. This puts pressure not just on Binance, but on the efficacy of the monitorship model itself.