Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) called cryptocurrencies a “scapegoat” for the federal government’s concerns about illicit finance, according to his testimony from a Tuesday crypto hearing held by the United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
During the hearing focused on countering illicit finance, terrorism, and sanctions evasions, Deputy Secretary of the Department of the Treasury Adewale O. Adeyemo requested additional tools to combat rising unlawful cryptocurrency use, including the ability to “reach extraterritorially” when digital assets harm U.S. interests.
“Our problem is that actors are increasingly finding ways to hide their identities and move resources using virtual currency,” Adeyemo said. “What has always been true is that terrorists and other malign actors seek new ways to move their resources in light of the actions we are taking to cut them off from accessing the traditional financial system.
Key senatorial figures such as Scott, questioned Adeyemo about the entire illicit finance landscape beyond crypto, where most unlawful funding comes from.
“It feels like digital assets have become the scapegoat of this administration,” Scott said to Adeyemo, noting that conversations regarding the topic focused wholly on digital assets “misses the elephant in the room.”
“For us to have a conversation that sounds like a digital asset conversation as opposed to a conversation about illicit financing that is far larger than digital assets to me makes it into a scapegoat,” Scott said.
Blockchain trade association Chamber of Digital Commerce referred to Scott’s remarks as “crucial,” given that they could “influence future digital regulations.”
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