The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, better known as FinCEN, has issued a formal alert to US banks warning them about the evolving playbook Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps uses to sidestep sanctions. The core message: the IRGC isn’t just relying on old-school shell companies anymore. It’s integrating digital asset infrastructure into its evasion toolkit.
What FinCEN actually flagged
The alert describes a coordinated, multi-layered strategy. The IRGC sets up front companies, routes funds through intermediary service providers, and then layers digital asset transactions on top of that structure to further obscure the money trail.
The use of intermediaries is particularly notable. Rather than interacting directly with exchanges or banks, the IRGC apparently relies on third-party service providers who act as buffers. These intermediaries handle the actual touchpoints with the financial system, adding distance between the sanctioned entity and its money.
FinCEN’s goal with the alert is straightforward. It wants to sharpen the detection and compliance capabilities of financial institutions so they can spot these patterns before funds move through the system unchecked.
What this means for the crypto industry and investors
When FinCEN tells every bank in America to watch for specific digital asset red flags tied to Iranian military operations, the downstream effects are real. Banks that custody crypto or facilitate fiat on-ramps and off-ramps will likely tighten their transaction monitoring.
Exchanges operating in the US should expect increased scrutiny around transactions involving jurisdictions or entities with any proximity to Iranian financial networks. Know-your-customer and anti-money-laundering programs will need to account for the specific layering techniques described in the alert, particularly the use of intermediary service providers that sit between the sanctioned entity and the crypto transaction itself.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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