China sentences drug money launderer to death over $7 million in crypto transactions

Source Cryptopolitan

The Supreme People’s Procuratorate of China (SPP) disclosed a cross-border narcotics and money-laundering case in which a defendant identified as Li Moubo was sentenced to death after converting more than 48-million-yuan (about $7.04 million) worth of drug proceeds through virtual currencies.

The case demonstrates Beijing’s resolve to unleash its heaviest criminal penalties against any crypto-facilitated financial crime, very much a signal worthy of concern on the part of any operator or trader touching Chinese-linked digital asset flows.

What the procuratorate announced

Deputy Procurator-General Miao Shengming delivered his account during a press conference on enforcement against narcotics held on June 25. The Chongqing procuratorial authority handled the case under direct supervision by the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, China’s highest prosecution body.

According to reports, Li was charged with offenses that included transnational drug smuggling, trafficking, transporting, and money laundering. Li received a collective death sentence after being convicted of multiple counts.

Procuratorial offices in China charged over 1,200 persons with drug-related money laundering between January 2025 and May 2026, citing Miao Shengming. The SPP said these prosecutions are part of a larger investigation into both “self-money laundering” and “third-party money laundering” and criminal asset recovery tied to the drug trade.

How was a ruling reached?

The Chinese criminal court system is inquisitorial in nature. That is, the procuratorate submits evidence, and the items presented at trial will determine a verdict. Additionally, as in the procedure for serious criminal cases involving drug offenses, the case against Li went through the standard route (investigation, prosecution under the supervision of the SPP, and sentencing by a People’s Court in Chongqing).

In the SPP’s announcement about Li, no mention was made of whether any arguments had been made in his defense or whether any appeals to the conviction were given, nor did it suggest that a People’s court disagreed with the finding made by them under either its own authority or China’s criminal justice system.

China’s criminal justice system has a conviction rate of greater than 99%, and capital cases involving drug trafficking have historically drawn limited public scrutiny of the defense’s position. No information in the SPP’s press conference or Xinhua’s reporting indicated whether Li’s legal counsel contested the charges or the severity of the sentence.

Pattern of crypto enforcement

In recent years, the enforcement of crypto laws and regulations within the People’s Republic of China has reflected a larger pattern in law enforcement in the country. This is not surprising given the fact that in 2021, the People’s Bank of China banned domestic cryptocurrency trading and mining. The SPP’s intent in emphasizing Li’s use of cryptocurrency in its press release was clearly to make it clear that virtual currencies are not merely ancillary to the crime but are instead an integral part of the criminal activity.

The continuing proliferation of illicit crypto activity continues to expand on a global basis. According to TRM Labs’ 2026 Crypto Crime Report, the total volume of illicit cryptocurrency transfers in 2025 reached $158 billion in 2025, over $100 billion of which was from Chinese-language escrow and money laundering operations. The report indicates that these Chinese-language escrow and money laundering networks operate primarily as a form of infrastructure for the illicit global markets rather than state-directed operations.

China’s approach to crypto-linked crime contrasts with Western jurisdictions in both speed and severity. The U.S. Department of Justice in February 2026 sentenced Daren Li, a dual Chinese and St. Kitts and Nevis national, to 20 years in prison for his role in laundering $73 million through a cryptocurrency investment scam. That case involved fraud rather than narcotics, but it illustrates how both governments are escalating penalties for crypto-facilitated money laundering, with China going further by applying capital punishment.

What does this mean for the market?

For exchanges, over-the-counter desks, and compliance teams handling flows with any nexus to China, the Li Moubo case is a concrete reminder that Beijing treats crypto laundering as a capital offense, not merely a regulatory violation. The 1,200 prosecutions announced alongside the case suggest a systematic enforcement campaign rather than an isolated example.

Traders and service providers operating in jurisdictions that interact with Chinese crypto flows should expect continued pressure. The SPP’s public emphasis on recovering drug-related assets signals that asset seizure and forfeiture will accompany these prosecutions.

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