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You are here: Home / Cryptocurrency News / Crypto Scam / Crypto Scam: India Busts ₹226 Cr USDT Terror Network

Crypto Scam: India Busts ₹226 Cr USDT Terror Network

What to know:

  • Scam funds were funneled through mule accounts, swapped for USDT via OTC brokers, split across wallets, and moved through exchanges, hawala networks, and the dark web.
  • ₹226 crore network allegedly tied to Hamas, Houthis, drug trafficking, and smuggling syndicates.
  • Bust spotlights AML gaps, likely speeding India’s KYC, OTC due diligence, and crypto compliance rules.

By Ananthyka J | Edited By Sahana Kiran,May 21, 2026, 1:30 PM

Crypto Scam

India’s Gujarat Cyber Cell has shut down a global crypto scam operation tied to terror funding, dark web drug deals, and smuggling rings. The group funnelled ₹226 crore through digital assets, leading to nine arrests. Investigators traced funds moved via USDT, OTC brokers, and hawala networks across multiple wallets.

Operation structure

The crypto scam network started by gathering scam money across India. Funds flowed into mule accounts and cash layers before being swapped for USDT using OTC brokers. Blockchain traces were hidden by breaking funds into smaller amounts and moving them between wallets, exchanges, hawala routes, and dark web contacts. Final destinations reportedly include Hamas and Houthis, showing how hard it is to track digital money across borders.

India's Gujarat Cyber Cell has shut down a global crypto scam
Source: NDTV

Also Read: Crypto Regulation South Carolina Bans CBDC and Expands Bitcoin Rights Law

Funding of Terror and Other Illicit Activities

The manifestation of terror financing through the use of virtual currencies in this crypto scam is criminally significant in that it can constitute a method of raising the funds necessary for terror activities. Law enforcement officials have pointed out that the criminals exploited the USDT token as a source of liquidity and for conducting rapid transactions throughout the world. These monetary transactions were then conveniently masked to make it difficult even for on-chain analytics to trace the funds.

🇮🇳 India just busted a ₹226 crore crypto network allegedly linked to drugs, money laundering & terror financing.

And the craziest part?

Investigators say the network heavily used Monero ( $XMR), the privacy coin governments struggle to track.

According to Gujarat Cyber… pic.twitter.com/sfxB7XGnZ2

— Sumit Kapoor (@moneygurusumit) May 21, 2026

Apart from the drug trafficking, hawala, and smuggling syndicates are also mentioned as some of the ways through which the criminals in this crypto scam have mingled the traditional financial crimes with the use of blockchain as a financial tool. The fallout is a renewed interest by regulators to the issues of OTC desks, P2P platforms, and exchange KYC procedures in India’s digital asset ecosystem.

Also Read: Crypto Hacks Surge as AI Cyber Threats Rise in 2026

Legal and Regulatory Issues

The illegal operation demonstrates the necessity of the implementation of highly effective measures of transaction tracking, identification of the wallets involved in illegal activities, and sharing of intelligence information across national borders. Although blockchain technology itself may be characterized as being transparent at first glance, the efforts to hide the illicit activities in this crypto scam, by, among other examples, the opening of several wallets to confuse tracking, present a serious challenge to law enforcement.

The consequences could be the further willingness of India to introduce crypto compliance rules after this crypto scam, one of which heavily focuses on the diligence of the OTC brokers, while also requiring the reporting of the virtual asset service providers to the authorities to be able to combat the illicit finance effectively.

Also Read: MAS Tightens Singapore Crypto Rules Following BSQ Licensing Revocation

Filed Under: Crypto Scam, Cryptocurrency News

About Ananthyka J

Ananthyka J is a market reporter at Tronweekly, reporting on cryptocurrency news. She covers cryptocurrency markets, blockchain technology, and digital asset regulation, focusing on Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi, altcoins, and crypto policy. Her reporting emphasizes clear and accurate market coverage, including crypto market movements, regulatory developments, and blockchain adoption. She holds a BA in Journalism and Mass Communication and an MA in Communication and Media Studies. She has also completed multiple media internships, follows strict editorial and fact-checking standards, and discloses potential conflicts of interest when reporting.

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