Huione-Linked Wallets Moved Nearly $1 Billion in USDT to Centralized Exchanges After FinCEN Crackdown
In the weeks following the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) targeting of Huione Group, blockchain analytics have revealed a startling development. Huione-linked wallets have moved nearly $1 billion

In the weeks following the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) targeting of Huione Group, blockchain analytics have revealed a startling development. Huione-linked wallets have moved nearly $1 billion in USDT (Tether) to centralized exchanges (CEXs), raising red flags across global compliance desks and triggering renewed scrutiny of stablecoin flows.
The revelations come just months after FinCEN issued a formal advisory, flagging Huione Pay and related entities as high-risk conduits for money laundering, fraud, and illicit financial activity, with a particular focus on networks in Southeast Asia and ties to cyber scam operations. In response, FinCEN urged U.S. financial institutions to immediately cease direct or indirect dealings with any accounts or counterparties tied to Huione and its sprawling payment ecosystem.
Blockchain investigators have now traced just under $1 billion in USDT transactions originating from wallets allegedly linked to the Huione network, with the majority of the funds flowing through centralized exchanges, some of which are headquartered outside U.S. regulatory reach.
“Over $970 million in USDT has been funneled from Huione-linked addresses into major CEXs in a matter of weeks,” said a source from an on-chain forensic firm, speaking under condition of anonymity. “These wallets were relatively dormant before the FinCEN advisory, but activity spiked significantly after the notice, suggesting efforts to liquidate or relocate funds before further enforcement actions.”
The transactions show sophisticated structuring, often moving through multiple intermediary wallets and in small batches to avoid detection. The receiving exchanges have not been publicly identified, but observers believe a number of Asia-based platforms may have served as key off-ramps.
This development places renewed pressure on Tether’s USDT, the world’s largest stablecoin by market cap, already under sustained scrutiny for its role in enabling cross-border crypto flows that may sidestep traditional banking compliance checks. While Tether has previously stated it cooperates with law enforcement and freezes wallets when directed, critics argue that USDT’s liquidity and relative anonymity remain attractive to illicit actors.
“These kinds of flows are exactly why regulators around the world are ramping up their focus on stablecoins,” said a former U.S. Treasury official. “When you see a sanctioned network allegedly moving close to a billion dollars post-designation, it speaks volumes about the current enforcement limitations.”
The situation is likely to amplify global calls for greater stablecoin transparency, stricter Know-Your-Customer (KYC) enforcement by exchanges, and tighter oversight of cross-border transactions. It also reignites debates over the role centralized exchanges play in facilitating or intercepting these flows, especially those operating in jurisdictions with more relaxed compliance standards.
Some analysts suggest this may accelerate efforts by major stablecoin issuers, like Circle (USDC) and Reserve-based projects like USXM and RPLUSD, to emphasize regulatory alignment and audit transparency as a competitive differentiator in the marketplace.
Meanwhile, centralized exchanges that unwittingly facilitated Huione-linked transactions may face regulatory backlash, particularly if they failed to implement sufficient transaction monitoring or ignored suspicious activity tied to flagged wallet clusters.
For FinCEN, the Huione case underscores the evolving challenges of policing decentralized networks, particularly when bad actors use liquid, high-volume stablecoins like USDT to quietly move funds at scale. For the crypto industry, the message is clear: compliance is no longer optional, and regulatory agility may soon become just as important as technical scalability.
As investigations deepen and regulators refine their enforcement strategies, the Huione-linked USDT flows may become a defining case study in the next phase of crypto compliance, one where blockchain’s transparency meets the full weight of traditional financial oversight.