Original authors: Deng Xiaoyu, Li Haojun
Recently, Deng's team received an inquiry from a student.

Xiao A (pseudonym) saw someone on Xianyu offering "high-price buyback of USDT," with an exchange rate two or three cents higher than that of the exchange. He felt he had found a business opportunity, so he bought USDT from the exchange and added the buyer on Xianyu via WeChat to complete the transaction.
The first trade earned him 50 yuan, very smoothly. The second trade earned him 200 yuan, also very smoothly. For the third trade, he pooled together 50,000 yuan as capital to try something big, but as soon as the money arrived in his account, his bank card was frozen.
When he checked with the bank, he found that his account had been frozen by the police for six months . To make matters worse, a few days later, he received a call from the local police station, asking him to come in and explain the situation, on the grounds that he was "suspected of aiding and abetting cybercrime."
A felt wronged: "I was just making money from the exchange rate difference, how did that make me a criminal?"
Based on recent inquiries about USDT arbitrage leading to frozen bank accounts, Attorney Deng will take you behind the scenes to uncover this hidden "digital black market" and see how those seemingly tempting "arbitrage" businesses gradually push ordinary people into the abyss of criminal activity.
Searching for "USDT" on Xianyu (a Chinese online marketplace for secondhand goods) usually returns nothing, but if you search for "USDT sales," "game top-up," or "payment on behalf of others," you'll find a bustling underground market. This market is filled with posts offering "high-price buybacks" and "arbitrage opportunities through exchange rate differences."
Always remember this basic business principle : as a stablecoin, USDT's price is publicly and transparently displayed on all major exchanges. If someone is willing to buy your USDT at a price higher than the market price (for example, if the exchange sells it for 6.8, they offer 7.2), or ask you to make payments on their behalf, there's only one reason: their money is not clean.
Criminals involved in telecom fraud and online gambling have large amounts of dirty money. They dare not buy cryptocurrencies directly from exchanges (because of risk control measures), so they use C2C platforms like Xianyu to transfer the dirty money to you and exchange it for your clean USDT.
Throughout the entire chain, you acted as a "human money laundering machine ." The few hundred yuan "difference" you earned was actually a "money laundering fee" paid to you by criminals.
Based on numerous cryptocurrency-related criminal cases handled by Attorney Deng's team, these transaction patterns on Xianyu (a Chinese online marketplace) are highly likely to violate the following crimes under the Criminal Law. This is not an exaggeration, but rather a real-world example occurring in judicial practice.
Scenario 1: "Top-up/Payment on Behalf" - Crime of Concealing or Hiding the Proceeds of Crime
1. Scheme : Buyers claim they don't have foreign currency cards and ask you to help them purchase Steam gift cards, payment cards, or pay for overseas goods using USDT or foreign currency, promising to pay high commissions.
2. Legal characterization : This is a typical case of "physically isolated" money laundering.
Scenario 2: "Selling USB at a high price" - Crime of aiding and abetting cybercrime (assisting in cybercrime)
1. Operation method : Simple and crude, the other party buys back your USDT at a price higher than that of the exchange.
2. Legal characterization : This is a major area of crime involving aiding and abetting.
Scenario 3: "Buying and selling" - Crime of illegal business operations
1. Operating strategy : If you are not just selling U occasionally, but doing it for a living, you buy low and sell high to make a profit from the price difference.
2. Legal characterization : This behavior may be considered illegal business operations.
Besides facing imprisonment, those involved in encrypted transactions on Xianyu are also in a state of utter helplessness regarding their civil rights.
Since the September 24, 2021 notice, national-level announcements have clearly defined virtual currency-related business activities as illegal financial activities.
what does that mean?
For a pittance of profit, saddled with a criminal record and impacting three generations, it's simply not worth it. Here are three suggestions for all you "side hustle" enthusiasts:
1. Stay away from all "payment on behalf" and "purchase on behalf" : No matter how nice the other party's reason is ("not enough study abroad quota", "no foreign credit card"), if it involves you using your own account to help others transfer money , block them immediately. You are doing a side job, not doing charity, and certainly not being a "money laundering tool".
2. Beware of "premium" transactions : There's no such thing as a free lunch. Any purchase of cryptocurrency at a price higher than the exchange's market price is suspicious. Don't let a few cents' difference in exchange rate put you in the range of a crackdown on credit card fraud.
3. What should I do if my card is frozen?
You might think that "arbitrage trading" on Xianyu (a Chinese online marketplace) is just being a "cannon fodder" at the very bottom of a massive black market chain. Many young people mistakenly believe that the anonymity of blockchain is a natural barrier to crime, unaware that the "immutability" of on-chain data has become the most solid "ironclad evidence" for judicial authorities to convict and sentence individuals.
The upstream operators are hiding overseas, enjoying bloody profits; while you, downstream, become the easiest and lowest-cost target for the police to crack down on because of your real-name authenticated bank cards and Alipay accounts.
Don't wait until you're behind bars to realize the weight of the word "compliance".


