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  • 5 days ago
During a House Judiciary Committee hearing in July, Rep. Brad Knott (R-NC) asked former U.S. Attorney Ari Redbord about the possibility for cartels and terrorists to use "legitimate blockchain constructs."
Transcript
00:00I appreciate all of you and your testimony, and very, very interesting.
00:06I hope we can get to some deep substance on it today.
00:11I now recognize the gentleman from North Carolina, Mr. Knott, for five minutes.
00:15Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:16To the witnesses, thank you for coming to testify today.
00:19This is sort of a novel topic, but as each of you have stated clearly,
00:23this is a very important topic, and development around the blockchain technology, AI technology,
00:29it's something that is sort of a, it's only going to become more prevalent and more dominant
00:35in just about every area of our life, and that's true here in America.
00:39That's true overseas.
00:40I think it's going to be one of those paramount moments that it's going to be sort of formative.
00:45Where were you before?
00:47Where were you after?
00:48And to that end, as a former prosecutor myself, when I was prosecuting,
00:54I came on at the very end of the AI-free crime.
01:00And I started to see how blockchain and cryptocurrencies and artificial intelligence
01:03was infiltrating every area of the criminal world.
01:07And to that end, Mr. Redward, as the use of AI and blockchain technology does become more common,
01:14and it does become more integrated in every avenue,
01:17there's obviously access from domestic actors that are criminal and international actors.
01:24There's really no border that's recognized.
01:26How does that impact the criminal infrastructure, as it were,
01:30when you look at domestic versus international crime in that relationship?
01:34Thank you so much for the question.
01:36And yes, I feel like you would uniquely understand this as a former AUSA as well.
01:40You know, look, we both prosecuted cases in a world where there were, you know,
01:45networks of shell companies and hawalas and high-value art and real estate used to launder funds.
01:50But today, as criminal actors are looking to blockchains and cryptocurrencies,
01:55we can trace every transaction on an open public ledger, right?
01:59There's no more bulk cash smuggling.
02:01There's TRM to track and trace the flow of funds.
02:03So I think what we see right now is this really interesting convergence between AI crime,
02:08as we're going to discuss today, and crypto.
02:11And really, primarily, crypto is often the means of value transfer in these different crimes, right?
02:17You see these deepfake scams where they are scams trying to get cryptocurrency from, you know, investors or users.
02:24They are ransomware actors who are supercharging attacks where cryptocurrency is the payment.
02:29The significant difference now as we're investigating crimes as prosecutors and law enforcement
02:34is that we can trace and track every one of those payments on open public ledgers,
02:39which allow us to do financial crime investigation really better than we've ever done it before.
02:45Is there the ability, as you see it, to pinpoint with specificity criminal activity?
02:50And, I would say more importantly, going back to the trust that we need in law enforcement,
02:55pinpointing criminal actors because it's such a foggy space to many people.
02:59Can you pinpoint the actual criminal as opposed to just criminal activity?
03:04It's a great question, and absolutely in many circumstances.
03:08What we're doing, essentially, at TRM is we're taking that raw blockchain data, right,
03:12those alphanumeric addresses, those crypto wallets,
03:14and we're associating them with real-world entities.
03:17Oftentimes, it's terrorist financiers, ransomware actors, sanctions, for example.
03:23And that allows law enforcement to then take that data
03:26and track and trace the flow of funds to build out networks.
03:30Cartels are a great example of that today. I'm sorry.
03:32Is there a risk that cartels, terrorist states,
03:34could use legitimate constructs on the blockchain
03:36that are developed here in the United States for their own benefit,
03:40therefore taking advantage of a legitimate structure
03:43or a legitimate software that's developed here?
03:46Absolutely.
03:47And I think the real challenge for regulators and policymakers
03:50is how to ensure that lawful users have access to those types of tools
03:55and yet stop bad actors from using them.
03:58And to me, the answer is, and the U.S. Treasury Department over the last few years
04:01has done a pretty good job on this, target the bad actors,
04:04the North Korean cybercriminals, the ransomware actors, the scammers,
04:08as opposed to necessarily the lawful services that they're using.
04:12And is there a risk if we are too zealous in the prosecution?
04:15As a prosecutor, I'm all for strong law enforcement,
04:18but if we are too aggressive on the front end,
04:20as this technology is developing,
04:23could we stifle domestic innovation here at home
04:26if we are too aggressive in prosecuting?
04:28Absolutely.
04:29It is critical that we continue to focus on the bad actors in the space,
04:33which will allow the lawful ecosystem to grow,
04:36as opposed to the lawful services that are being used by bad actors.
04:40So absolutely.
04:41And really the key to all of this is to stop bad actors
04:44from leveraging the technology to allow this industry
04:46and this technology to grow.
04:49And then briefly, what can we do in Congress
04:51to ensure that law enforcement has the resources
04:53to target the bad actors with specificity?
04:56That's exactly right.
04:57I mean, today, what we really have across the U.S. government
05:00is a cadre of law enforcement agents
05:03that are really true experts, power users of blockchain intelligence tools.
05:06What we really need is that cadre to grow significantly.
05:10As bad actors are leveraging AI,
05:12as they're leveraging blockchain technology,
05:13every federal agent should have access to tools
05:17and the training necessary to sort of meet this new moment
05:20from a technology perspective.
05:21Sir, thank you.
05:23Other members, I ran out of time.
05:24Mr. Chairman, I yield back.

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