Tether Backed DOJ in $61M Fraud Seizure
Tether said the U.S. Department of Justice and Homeland Security Investigations acknowledged the company’s support in a major enforcement action tied to a pig-butchering crypto fraud scheme. The case involved the seizure of more than $61 million worth of USDT linked to wallets allegedly used to launder scam proceeds.
The announcement connects a corporate compliance narrative from Tether with an official U.S. forfeiture action in North Carolina, where federal agents traced victim funds through multiple wallets and seized remaining balances.
DOJ says agents traced scam proceeds through multiple wallets
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of North Carolina said federal agents seized over $61 million worth of Tether tied to alleged laundering of proceeds from crypto investment scams commonly known as “pig butchering” schemes. DOJ said investigators traced the funds to crypto addresses connected to the fraud activity.
According to the DOJ release, the scammers allegedly built trust with victims under romantic pretenses, pushed them toward fake crypto trading platforms, and then blocked withdrawals while demanding extra “tax” or “fee” payments. DOJ said the stolen money was then moved across many wallets to obscure control and ownership.
HSI Raleigh led the tracing, with Tether helping transfer assets
DOJ said agents and analysts from Homeland Security Investigations in Raleigh received a victim report through the HSI Tip Line, then traced the funds through the laundering chain. Authorities said several wallets still held substantial victim funds that were subject to seizure and forfeiture.
The DOJ statement specifically says the Department of Justice and HSI acknowledged Tether for helping transfer the seized assets. Tether’s own post repeats that point and says HSI was able to recover the funds with Tether’s assistance.
Tether is framing the case as part of a broader compliance push
In its announcement, Tether said the case highlights its law-enforcement cooperation model and cited internal figures including around $4.2 billion frozen in assets linked to illicit activity and collaboration with more than 310 agencies across 64+ countries. Tether also included a list of prior cases, including earlier DOJ and Secret Service-related actions.
That framing is important for Tether because enforcement cooperation has become a core part of how major stablecoin issuers defend their role in the financial system, especially as regulators focus more on fraud, sanctions, and cross-border illicit finance. This is an inference based on the company’s emphasis in the release and the DOJ acknowledgment.
The case reinforces a practical reality of stablecoin enforcement
The North Carolina seizure is another reminder that blockchain-based fraud proceeds can still be tracked and frozen when investigators can follow wallet flows and coordinate with issuers. DOJ and HSI’s public acknowledgment of Tether suggests issuer cooperation remains a key operational piece in large crypto fraud recoveries.
At the same time, the DOJ release focuses on the seizure and tracing process, not on final victim restitution timing, so the enforcement story is clear but the recovery process may still take time through forfeiture proceedings.
Why it matters for crypto
- This is a high-profile example of stablecoin issuer cooperation directly supporting a U.S. fraud seizure.
- DOJ’s language reinforces that pig-butchering scams remain a top enforcement priority in crypto.
- The case shows wallet tracing and issuer coordination are now standard tools in large scam investigations.
- For stablecoin issuers, law-enforcement responsiveness is increasingly part of the trust and compliance narrative.
- For users, it is another reminder that fake “investment platforms” remain a major scam vector.
What to watch next
- Whether DOJ files additional forfeiture updates or victim recovery guidance tied to this seizure.
- Any follow-up disclosures from HSI or DOJ on the broader network behind the wallets.
- More cases where stablecoin issuers are publicly acknowledged in fraud and laundering actions.
- Regulatory pressure on platforms and issuers to strengthen fraud monitoring and rapid response workflows.
- Whether Tether updates its law-enforcement cooperation metrics again after this case.
Source: Tether and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of North Carolina