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Inside North Korea’s Favorite Crypto Laundering Tool: THORChain

John-Paul Thorbjornsen, a former Australian Air Force pilot turned crypto entrepreneur, has spent recent weeks promoting his new crypto wallet, «Vultisig.» Built on THORChain — a blockchain he founded to allow crypto swaps without intermediaries — the wallet’s main selling point is that it’s harder to hack than similar apps.
Recently, Vultisig — along with the THORChain network itself — has seen a spike in activity, but security experts have traced the growth to a troubling source: North Korea’s Lazarus hacking group.
Following February’s $1.4 billion hack of crypto exchange Bybit — the largest cyber heist in history — THORChain emerged as central to North Korea’s laundering operations. Researchers have tracked nearly $1.2 billion — or 85%— of the stolen funds through the network, which has become the Kim regime’s primary tool for moving crypto between blockchains.
Unlike some other blockchain services, THORChain’s operators have refused to block transactions linked to the Bybit heist, despite requests from the FBI and other government agencies. THORChain wallets like Asgardex and Vultisig — tools that most people use to transact on the network — haven’t budged, either.
According to estimates from blockchain security researchers who spoke to CoinDesk, THORChain’s major wallet developers and validators — many publicly identified and based in jurisdictions with strict anti-money-laundering regulations, including the U.S. — have earned over $12 million in fees connected to the heist.
Thorbjornsen, known publicly as JP Thor, insists he is no longer involved in THORChain’s daily operations yet remains its most visible advocate. “The protocol keeps running and swapping despite chaos,” he told CoinDesk. “It’s doing great, actually.”
The U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has previously sanctioned blockchain services used in connection with money laundering, such as the mixer app Tornado Cash (which has since been delisted after a court ruling) and Bitzlato, an exchange. Prosecutors have also charged operators behind similar platforms.
For legal experts and the crypto community, whether THORChain — a layer-1 blockchain — should be treated differently than these other services revives a fundamental debate faced by virtually all crypto platforms: Is the network truly decentralized?
Critics argue it isn’t — at least in comparison to popular blockchains like Bitcoin and Ethereum, which have earned less scrutiny for facilitating illicit transactions. THORChain’s supporters «claim it’s decentralized when convenient, yet they’re profiting from this [Bybit hack],» said blockchain security researcher Taylor Monahan. «It’s a really bad look.»
THORChain’s transaction fees — particularly those earned by its wallet apps, which are maintained by small developer teams — further complicate its defense. According to a former U.S. Treasury Department official, «Anybody making money on fees related to the movement of hacked funds that have already been publicly attributed to Lazarus and North Korea potentially has an OFAC issue.»
Even some of THORChain’s most vocal supporters have grown concerned. «When the huge majority of your flows are stolen funds from North Korea for the biggest money heist in human history, it will become a national security issue,» cautioned a THORChain developer known as «TCB» on X. «[T]his isn’t a game anymore.»
Biggest hack in history
February’s hack of Bybit, a major Dubai-based crypto exchange, was large even by the standards of the Lazarus group — the elite North Korean cyber unit behind most of the largest crypto heists of the past decade.
The hack took place after Bybit’s founder was tricked into interacting with a website that Lazarus had compromised. The mistake granted the hackers access to some of Bybit’s primary Ethereum wallets. They stole $1.4 billion worth of ether (ETH) tokens from the exchange.
North Korea’s launderers, well-practiced after years of big-money crypto heists, immediately began splitting their record-breaking haul across a series of fresh crypto wallets — the first step in a complex journey designed to convert dirty crypto into clean cash.
«DPRK uses advanced technical capabilities to launder cryptocurrency,» explained Andrew Fierman, the head of national security intelligence at Chainalysis. After moving the funds «through an extensive number of intermediary wallets,» the launderers use «cross-chain bridges in order to move the stolen funds across various different assets, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tron, Solana and others.»
THORChain proved essential to the bridging stage, serving as a go-between for swapping tokens across blockchains — often repeatedly, to throw investigators off their trail.
«Before ThorChain existed, there was no way to swap from Ethereum to Bitcoin without getting frozen,» explained Monahan, a security researcher at MetaMask.
Centralized swap services — including crypto exchanges like Coinbase and Binance — require users to register their accounts and risk having illicit funds seized. Most decentralized services, meanwhile, lack the liquidity to support transactions on the scale of the Lazarus group.
Put on notice
On the day after the Bybit hack, THORChain’s daily swap volume exceeded $529 million — its biggest trading day ever, according to data from DeFiLlama. Volumes continued climbing for days afterward, generating millions of dollars in fees for THORChain’s validators, liquidity providers and wallet services.
On February 27, the FBI circulated a list of DPRK-linked blockchain addresses and urged «private sector entities including RPC node operators, exchanges, bridges, blockchain analytics firms, DeFi services, and other virtual asset service providers to block transactions with or derived from [them].»
By this point, many of the other crypto tools used by North Korea’s launderers had already begun blocking heist-linked activity.
Tether, the largest stablecoin operator, eventually froze $9 million linked to the heist, and Mantle, a layer-2 blockchain connected to Ethereum, froze $41 million more. One platform — a decentralized exchange operated by the company OKX — paused its services altogether.
For a moment, THORChain seemed like it might follow suit. In response to the FBI’s notice, a group of THORChain validators coordinated to halt Ethereum swaps on the protocol — a move intended to slow the outflow of illicit funds. But the pause lasted just 30 minutes before it was rolled back following community pushback.
«There is no proof, nor can there be, that any signed and propagated transaction is from a specific geographical location,» Thorbjornsen told CoinDesk, arguing that any links between THORChain and North Korea are «alleged» since the network’s users are not forced to register themselves.
The pause reversal proved to be a breaking point for some in the THORChain community. “Effective immediately, I will no longer be contributing to THORChain,” the protocol’s lead developer, known as “Pluto,” wrote in an X post.
Decentralization theater?
Thorbjornsen and others maintain that THORChain should be treated as a decentralized protocol like Bitcoin or Ethereum, neither of which blocked transactions following the Bybit heist.
They point to its community of more than 100 validators — computers that verify transactions — as evidence that no single entity controls the system.
THORChain’s governance model relies on these validators who stake the network’s native RUNE token to participate in consensus and earn rewards. In theory, major protocol decisions require approval from a supermajority of these validators, creating a distributed power structure resistant to centralized control.
Critics, however, argue the network is not nearly as decentralized as claimed. In January, a single developer paused the network during a liquidity crisis — an action that should have required validator consensus if the system were more decentralized.
When THORChain was involved in previous North Korean laundering operations, «we were told there was nothing they could do about the illicit funds,» said Monahan. «The entire time, JP had a single private key that had control over the entire system.»
Thorbjornsen concedes the chain was paused by an administrative keyholder at a moment when THORChain was facing an «existential» threat. However, Thorbjornsen said the pause was initiated by a keyholder with the pseudonym «Leena.»
Thorbjornsen created the Leena account early in THORChain’s development and initially used it to hide his real identity. He now says the Leena account is no longer solely controlled by him, and someone else paused the chain in accordance with acceptable security procedures.
For Thorbjornsen, the debate over who controlled the admin key misses the larger point.
«In the first couple years of Bitcoin existing, you could have easily made the case that Bitcoin was completely centralized,» he told CoinDesk, pointing to an instance in 2010 where Satoshi upgraded the original blockchain to fix a major bug.
«Decentralization is earned, and it’s earned by years of being in the arena and proving it,» Thorbjornsen said. «All of these things like the pause and the unpause … this is all part of the journey of decentralization.»
Business as usual
On March 1, THORChain’s biggest day of trading following the Bybit heist, the network recorded over $1 billion in swaps, more than it typically processes in an entire month.
The activity was a boon for THORChain’s infrastructure providers — wallet services and validators who take a cut of each transaction on the network.
According to blockchain forensics firm Chainalysis, THORChain node operators earned at least $12 million in fees connected to the Bybit heist. Chainalysis called its estimate «conservative.»
According to legal experts, these fees are what could ultimately get THORChain’s operators into trouble. A former U.S. Treasury Department official warned in an interview with CoinDesk that «a lot of this just comes down to the question of who’s making money: Is it a concentrated set of people, and is it relatively knowable that [the funds] are from bad actors?»
Wallet apps like Vultisig and Asgardex have earned special scrutiny from legal and security experts, since «frontend» applications used to interact with blockchains are generally considered more centralized than blockchains themselves.
Asgardex, one of the more popular THORChain wallets, earned $1 million from Bybit-linked transactions, according to Monahan. «The reason why you use Asgardex» as opposed to other THORChain wallets «is because you don’t want tracking — you don’t want filtering or anything,» said Thorbjornsen, who helped develop the program.
Thorbjornsen says he no longer has an operational or financial stake in Asgardex, which is open-source and can technically be re-programmed by its users to operate without fees. However, he has recently actively promoted VultiSig, his new hack-resistant THORChain wallet.
On March 20, Thorbjornsen boasted in an X post that more people than ever were using the app: «Vultisig swaps have collected $200k in revenue so far!» ZachXBT, a crypto sleuth known for investigating North Korea’s cyber operations, responded by pointing out that «a good chunk of that revenue is being generated from the Bybit hack.»
«Vultisig is not a chain,» ZachXBT said. «[T]hey operate a centralized interface for users to interact with protocols for a fee.»
On April 16, Vultisig is launching its official crypto token: VULT. The token will be distributed for free to some of the wallet’s most loyal users.
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Galaxy Digital Gets SEC Nod for U.S. Listing, Eyes Nasdaq Debut in May

Galaxy Digital is moving closer to a U.S. stock market listing after the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved its registration statement tied to a corporate reorganization.
The crypto and AI infrastructure firm, currently listed in the Toronto Stock Exchange, aims to shift its home base from the Cayman Islands to Delaware and list shares on the Nasdaq as “GLXY.” The firm’s expansion into the U.S. market comes as institutional demand for regulated crypto products continues to grow.
The company has scheduled a shareholder vote on the reorganization for May 9. The firm is expected to list shortly afterward. CEO Mike Novogratz called the registration effectiveness “an important milestone” in the firm’s bid to expand its reach.
Galaxy provides institutional services in crypto trading, asset management, and tokenization. It also invests in and operates data centers that power AI and high-performance computing.
Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
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Ripple, BCG Project $18.9T Tokenized Asset Market by 2033

The market for tokenized financial instruments, or real-world assets (RWAs), could reach $18.9 trillion by 2033 as the technology’s growth is nearing a «tipping point,» according to a joint report on Monday by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) by payments-focused digital asset infrastructure firm Ripple.
That would mean an average 53% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), taking the middle ground between the report’s conservative scenario of $12 trillion in tokenized assets in the next eight years and a more optimistic $23.4 trillion projection.
Tokenization is the process of using blockchain rails to record ownership and move assets—securities, commodities, real estate. It’s a red-hot sector in crypto, with several global traditional financial firms pursuing tokenization to achieve efficiency gains, faster and cheaper settlements and around-the-clock transactions. JPMorgan’s Kinexys platform has already processed more than $1.5 trillion in tokenized transactions, with over $2 billion in daily volume. BlackRock’s tokenized U.S. dollar money market fund (BUIDL), issued with tokenization firm Securitize, nears $2 billion in assets under management and is increasingly being used in decentralized finance (DeFi).
“[The] technology is ready, regulation is evolving, and foundational use cases are in the market,” said Martijn Siebrand, Digital Assets Program Manager at ABN AMRO, in the report.
The report highlighted tokenized government bonds, U.S. Treasuries, as an early success, allowing corporate treasurers seamlessly shift idle cash into tokenized short-term government bonds from digital wallets without any intermediaries, managing liquidity in real time and around the clock.
Private credit is another sector drawing attention, opening access to traditionally opaque and illiquid markets while offering investors clearer pricing and fractional ownership. Similarly, carbon markets are flagged as fertile ground, where blockchain-based registries could enhance transparency and traceability of emissions credits.
Key challenges still linger
Despite the growth, the report identified five key barriers for broader adoption: fragmented infrastructure, limited interoperability across platforms, uneven regulatory progress, inconsistent custody frameworks, and lack of smart contract standardization. Most tokenized assets today settle in isolation, with off-chain cash legs limiting efficiency gains. Tokenized asset markets struggle to unlock secondary liquidity without shared delivery-versus-payment (DvP) standards.
Regulatory clarity varies significantly by region. Switzerland, the EU, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates have developed comprehensive legal frameworks for tokenized securities and infrastructure, while major markets like India and China remain restrictive or undefined. This uneven progress complicates cross-border operations and forces firms to tailor infrastructure market-by-market.
Despite these headwinds, early adopters are expanding fast. The report identifies three phases of tokenization: low-risk adoption of familiar instruments like bonds and funds; expansion into complex products such as private credit and real estate; and full market transformation, including illiquid assets like infrastructure and private equity. Most firms are currently in the first or second phase, with scalability hinging on regulatory alignment and infrastructure maturity.
Tokenization can unlock meaningful savings for processes such as bond issuances, real estate fund tokenization and collateral management, driving further growth, the report noted.
Cost is becoming less of a constraint for firms, the report said. Focused tokenization projects can now launch for under $2 million, while end-to-end integrations—covering issuance, custody, compliance, and trading—can cost up to $100 million for large institutions.
However, without industry-wide coordinated action, the same silos and fragmentation tokenization seeks to eliminate could reemerge in digital form, said in the report Jorgen Ouaknine, global head of innovation and digital assets at Euroclear, a global financial market infrastructure provider.
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Pierre Rochard, the Bitcoin Maximalist OG, on Mining, Markets and Modern Finance

Pierre Rochard, who calls himself a “bitcoin maximalist OG,” first discovered Bitcoin in 2012 while studying at UT Austin. With interests in Austrian economics and open-source software, he was “captivated” by bitcoin as the intersection of both. He became an early thought leader, co-founding the Satoshi Nakamoto Institute to house foundational writings and cypherpunk philosophy.
Across roles at BitPay, Kraken, and most recently Riot Platforms (RIOT), his work has spanned bitcoin infrastructure and advocacy. At Riot, he led responses to environmental criticisms, including a viral parody video that “put the critics on the defensive” and reframed the debate around mining and value creation.
Pierre Rochard is a speaker at Consensus 2025, in Toronto, May 14-16. Get your pass here.
“Critics think mining is wasteful because they don’t believe bitcoin has value,” Rochard said. “But it’s about monetary sovereignty — the ability to control your own money.”
Now, with The Bitcoin Bond Company, he is taking on the next frontier: unlocking bitcoin for fixed-income investors.
Unlike Michael Saylor’s long-only strategy, Rochard wants to build “bankruptcy-remote, bitcoin-only structures” with clear life-cycles and risk-tranching. The idea is to make Bitcoin more palatable to traditional credit allocators.
His goal? Acquire $1 trillion in bitcoin over the next 21 years — market conditions permitting.
On the price cycle, Rochard believes the four-year halving model is losing relevance for price prediction purposes. “Bitcoin’s CAGR is now tied to interest rates,” he said, noting its shift toward becoming a global macro asset. “Higher Fed rates pull capital out of Bitcoin — that’s what slows adoption.”
While education remains a major hurdle, he’s optimistic. “Ten years ago, this idea was laughed off. Today, Bitcoin-backed credit products are inevitable.”
At Consensus 2025, Pierre is focused on accelerating that education, especially among institutions looking to diversify beyond real estate and equities.
Rochard was also clear-eyed about the risks and hurdles in bitcoin adoption. “The biggest challenge is education,” he emphasized. “Most investors have never seen a fixed-income product backed purely by bitcoin. They’re used to real estate or corporate debt — this is a new asset class for them.”
When asked about concerns like low transaction fees or empty blocks in 2025, Rochard pushed back. “People worry about low fees, but that assumes a static system. If there’s ever an attack or censorship, fees skyrocket — and miners spin up. It’s anti-fragile by design.”
Ultimately, Rochard’s pitch is simple: “Bitcoin is no longer a fringe experiment. It’s a core monetary technology — and it’s time the credit markets caught up.”
Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
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