Binance denies firing investigators after Iran-linked $1.7B flow reports
Binance has disputed reports that it fired internal investigators after they flagged roughly $1.7 billion in cryptocurrency flows linked to Iran, according to The Block (https://www.theblock.co/post/390952/binance-denies-firing-investigators?utmsource=policy.xml&utmmedium=rss). The company has maintained that its compliance function remains intact and that characterizations of retaliation are inaccurate.
Chief executive Richard Teng has denied that any investigator was dismissed for raising compliance concerns, as reported by CCN (https://www.ccn.com/news/crypto/binance-compliance-team-1b-iran-linked-flows-backstory/?utm_source=openai). He has also said an internal review found no evidence that the cited transactions violated applicable sanctions laws.
What reports allege about Iran-linked accounts and $1.7B flows
Coverage of the matter has alleged that about $1.7 billion in crypto moved through two Binance accounts to Iran-linked entities, including wallets tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, as reported by Blockmanity (https://blockmanity.com/news/binance-bombshell-how-1-7-billion-may-have-flowed-to-iranian-backed-groups/). These descriptions hinge on blockchain forensics that aim to attribute wallets to sanctioned parties, a process that can be probabilistic and subject to later validation.
Separate reporting has described a dismantled probe and the suspension of several investigators after findings were raised, as reported by The Wall Street Journal (https://www.wsj.com/finance/currencies/binance-iran-sanctions-financing-staff-b1648133). Binance has disputed that the inquiry ended or that staff were removed for surfacing concerns.
Legal practitioners have flagged the stakes given the exchange’s ongoing oversight commitments following its 2023 settlement. “That’s rather shocking that that happened under a monitorship with [Binance] internal investigators,” said Robert Appleton, partner at Olshan Frome Wolosky and former U.S. Department of Justice sanctions lead, as quoted by Fortune (https://fortune.com/2026/02/13/binance-investigators-fired-iran-sanctions-potential-violations/?utm_source=openai).
Sanctions context: OFAC, IRGC links, and Binance’s compliance stance
U.S. sanctions administered by the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control restrict dealings with Iran and generally prohibit transactions involving the IRGC, according to OFAC. Global platforms typically deploy sanctions screening, geofencing, and investigative escalations to mitigate exposure to restricted jurisdictions and parties.
In 2023, Binance pleaded guilty to compliance failures and agreed to pay a $4.3 billion penalty to U.S. authorities and accept monitorship obligations, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Any substantiated lapse now could draw additional scrutiny under those obligations, though allegations alone do not establish a violation.
Company leaders have framed compliance as an ongoing investment cycle, with commitments to hire specialists and deepen law-enforcement cooperation, as noted by MEXC News (https://www.mexc.com/news/720722?utm_source=openai). These commitments are presented as part of a broader effort to align with evolving regulatory expectations across jurisdictions.
At the time of this writing, Coinbase Global (COIN) was recently around $157.85 on delayed NasdaqGS data after a 1.49% overnight decline, indicating a cautious backdrop for crypto-related equities. Market levels are included for context only and do not imply direction.
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