The US Department of Justice announced Wednesday that crypto exchange Paxful has been sentenced to pay $4 million after pleading guilty to multiple criminal charges. The peer-to-peer platform admitted to conspiring to promote illegal prostitution, knowingly transmitting funds from criminal activity, and violating anti-money laundering requirements.
According to prosecutors, Paxful operated from January 2017 to September 2019 and facilitated over 26 million trades worth nearly $3 billion. During this period, the company collected more than $29.7 million in revenue while knowingly serving criminal customers.
The Justice Department said Paxful deliberately marketed itself as a platform that did not require customer information. The company presented anti-money laundering policies that it knew were never actually implemented or enforced.
One of Paxful’s major customers was Backpage, a classified advertising website that authorities shut down for hosting illegal prostitution ads. The Justice Department revealed that Paxful’s founders openly discussed the “Backpage Effect” and how it helped their business grow.
Between 2015 and 2022, Paxful’s collaboration with Backpage and a similar site generated $2.7 million in profits for the crypto platform. This relationship became a central part of the criminal case against the company.
Prosecutors determined that the appropriate criminal penalty for Paxful should have been $112.5 million. However, they reduced the fine to $4 million after assessing the company’s financial situation and determining it could not pay the larger amount.
Paxful shut down its operations in November 2023. In a blog post published in October, the company blamed the closure on lasting impacts from misconduct by former co-founders Ray Youssef and Artur Schaback before 2023.
The company also cited unsustainable operational costs from extensive compliance remediation efforts. The post has since been deleted from Paxful’s website.
The Paxful platform allowed customers to negotiate trades of digital assets for cash, prepaid cards, and gift cards. Founders marketed the site as a way to avoid Bank Secrecy Act anti-money laundering requirements.
The case represents one of several enforcement actions by federal prosecutors against crypto platforms accused of facilitating illegal activity. Paxful pleaded guilty to the charges in December 2024 before receiving its sentence in February 2026.
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