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The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has announced a $750,000 settlement with ShapeShift AG, a defunct digital asset exchange previously incorporated in Switzerland and operated from Denver, Colorado. The settlement resolves allegations that ShapeShift violated multiple U.S. sanctions programs by processing digital asset transactions with users in Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria. Between December 2016 and October 2018, the platform engaged in 17,183 prohibited transactions involving approximately $12.5 million in cryptocurrency. OFAC determined that ShapeShift’s conduct was non-egregious and not voluntarily self-disclosed, factors that influenced the settlement amount[1].
ShapeShift, founded by cryptocurrency pioneer Erik Voorhees, operated as a non-KYC (Know Your Customer) exchange, allowing users to trade cryptocurrencies like
and anonymously. The exchange ceased operations in 2021. OFAC’s enforcement action highlights the risks of operating without robust sanctions compliance measures. The agency noted that ShapeShift had no program to screen users or transactions for sanctions risks, despite collecting IP address data that could have identified users in sanctioned jurisdictions. The exchange only implemented compliance controls after receiving an administrative subpoena from OFAC[2].The violations spanned four sanctions programs: the Cuban Assets Control Regulations (39 violations), Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (16,839 violations), Sudanese Sanctions Regulations (33 violations), and Syrian Sanctions Regulations (272 violations). OFAC cited aggravating factors, including the lack of compliance infrastructure and the conveyance of economic benefits to sanctioned jurisdictions. Mitigating factors included ShapeShift’s small size, cessation of operations, and cooperation with the investigation[3]. The settlement underscores the importance of proactive compliance, particularly for entities with U.S. operational ties.
ShapeShift’s U.S.-based leadership and engineering teams, along with its registration in Colorado, subjected it to U.S. sanctions laws. The case aligns with broader regulatory scrutiny of cryptocurrency platforms, emphasizing that foreign-incorporated entities with significant U.S. operations remain liable for compliance failures. OFAC’s enforcement action serves as a cautionary example for emerging digital asset services, reinforcing the necessity of risk-based compliance programs tailored to operational scale and geographic reach[3].
The settlement reflects a trend of increased enforcement against crypto firms for sanctions violations. In 2023, Binance agreed to a $4.3 billion penalty for similar breaches, while ShapeShift had previously settled with the SEC in 2021. These cases highlight the evolving regulatory landscape, where agencies are applying traditional financial compliance frameworks to decentralized and cross-border digital asset platforms. For ShapeShift, the resolution marks the end of its legal exposure, though its legacy underscores the critical role of due diligence in sanctions compliance[1].
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