The post Korea Customs $101M Remittance Ring WeChat, Crypto Wallets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. South Korean authorities have uncovered an underground The post Korea Customs $101M Remittance Ring WeChat, Crypto Wallets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. South Korean authorities have uncovered an underground

Korea Customs $101M Remittance Ring WeChat, Crypto Wallets

South Korean authorities have uncovered an underground remittance operation that moved roughly 150 billion won (about $100 million to $110 million) through digital assets, according to local media reports.

The Korea Customs Service has referred three suspects for prosecution, including a Chinese man in his 30s, on charges of violating the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act, Yonhap News reported Monday.

Over the past four years, the illicit operation has allegedly laundered more than $100 million collected through WeChat Pay and Alipay, which was converted into cryptocurrencies through overseas exchanges and transferred into South Korean wallets before being converted back to fiat currency.

The group disguised the transfers as legitimate expenses, including for cosmetic surgery costs and tuition fees for students abroad.

Korea Customs busts crypto ring

The case ranks among the largest crypto-linked illegal remittance schemes uncovered in South Korea in recent years and highlights the growing challenges authorities face in tracking cross-border financial crimes involving digital assets.

Related: Web3 revenue shifts from blockchains to wallets and DeFi apps

In December, a woman in her thirties was jailed for laundering about $180 million in illicit funds through cryptocurrencies, one of the largest such operations identified by regulators.

The scale of the case highlights the “challenges regulators face when trying to track illicit crypto flows,” wrote financial platform OneSafe in a December post.

Related: Bitcoin rallies, ETF flows rebound as US crypto policy stalls: Finance Redefined

The latest investigation comes as South Korea moves to tighten oversight of crypto-related financial activity.

The country’s Financial Services Commission is preparing a to expand Anti-Money Laundering rules by applying Travel Rule requirements to transactions of 1 million won ($680), requiring exchanges to collect data on these transfers, Cointelegraph reported in November 2025.

The development seeks to stop potential money laundering operations from breaking up transactions into sub-$680 increments to avoid detection. 

Officials plan to finalize the new framework in the first half of 2026 and submit legislative amendments to the National Assembly.

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