
A new law passed in Brazil designed to bolster the fight against organized crime will allow authorities to seize digital assets from criminals and potentially use them in the public’s interest.
The “Anti-Gang Law” was signed into law by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Tuesday, creating much harsher penalties for crime leaders while providing authorities the means “for the financial, logistical, and material strangulation” of organized crime entities.
“The law represents progress in combating organized crime, by incorporating mechanisms for financial strangulation and strengthening the state's capacity to respond to the growing complexity of these criminal structures,” said Brazil’s Minister of Justice and Public Security Wellington Lima, in a statement.
“The focus is on reaching their highest levels, with more effective instruments and coordinated action,” he added.
While the bill does not specifically mention any crypto assets by name, it allows judges to order precautionary measures like “seizure, attachment, blocking or freezing of movable and immovable property, rights and assets, including digital or virtual assets” in cases where there is sufficient evidence of a serious crime as defined in the law.
In certain cases, the judge may also be able to authorize the early sale of assets, with proceeds then flowing to public security funds.
Custody of seized assets based on precautionary measures will fall to the public authorities, except in cases where a judge determines “the material impossibility or technical inadequacy of custody by the public authorities is demonstrated.”
In other jurisdictions, authorities have had difficulty in maintaining custody of crypto assets gathered from investigations. For example, law enforcement in South Korea didn’t adhere to crypto custody guidelines, and lost access to $1.4 million in Bitcoin.
Later, representatives for the National Tax Service in South Korea posted photos of seed phrases, the 12-word phrases that unlock a crypto wallet’s private key, allowing an unknown individual to grab $4.8 million in crypto tokens at face value—before ultimately returning them.
The newly passed law in Brazil was sent to congress in November as the nation’s government and central bank introduced proposals to crack down on crime and illegal Bitcoin or stablecoin use. The nation also clamped down on an illegal Bitcoin mining operation in September.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
6 Arranging Administrations to Change Your Open air Space - 2
Book excerpt: "Enough" by Dr. Ania Jastreboff and Oprah Winfrey - 3
Make your choice for the sweet that transports you to its nation of beginning! - 4
IDF finds weapon of slain hostage Capt. Daniel Perez in booby-trapped Gaza compound - 5
The Latest: Fueling begins as NASA aims to send 1st crew to the moon in 53 years
These HGTV stars made a pledge to keep their kids off smartphones. Here's how it's going.
Best Internet based Course for Learning Another Dialect: Which Stage Do You Like?
How a cocktail of rogue storms and climate chaos unleashed deadly flooding across Asia
Figure out How to Pick a SUV with Senior-Accommodating Tech Elements
Instructions to Pick the Ideal Pre-assembled Home for Your Necessities
Find the Mysteries of Powerful Using time productively: Augmenting Efficiency and Proficiency
A Couple of Reasonable Guitars for 2024
Artemis II's moonbound toilet is working again to astronauts' relief after overnight fix
This Overlooked Predator Is Running Out of Time—Why Conservationists Are Racing to Save the Striped Hyena













