Binance faces $1.7B Iran scrutiny

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Binance faces $1.7B Iran scrutiny
Binance faces $1.7B Iran scrutiny
Isaac Francis
Written by Isaac Francis
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US lawmakers have called on the Treasury Department and the Department of Justice to investigate Binance over allegations that $1.7 billion in crypto transfers were linked to Iran-connected entities.

In a letter led by Senator Elizabeth Warren and Senator Chris Van Hollen, 11 lawmakers urged Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Attorney General Pam Bondi to launch a formal probe, citing national security and sanctions enforcement concerns amid heightened US-Iran tensions.

“These allegations raise grave concerns that poor illicit finance controls at Binance remain a significant threat to national security; our illicit finance controls are dangerously compromised if enormous sums can flow through Binance to terrorist groups or sanctions evaders, and the firm controls the world’s largest digital asset exchange so it is essential that bad actors cannot benefit from its platform,”

The lawmakers stated.

The senators pointed to reports alleging that at least two Binance accounts were used to channel funds to entities linked to the Iran-backed Houthis and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and that more than 1,500 Binance accounts were accessed by Iranian nationals.

“In light of these issues, we are deeply troubled by the prospect that Binance may once again be prioritising profits over its compliance obligations,”

The lawmakers argued, giving authorities until March 13, 2026 to outline investigative findings, while warning that any breach of the exchange’s 2023 settlement terms could carry severe legal consequences, and following the announcement the Binance share price was unchanged at $N/A.

The concerns come against the backdrop of Binance’s historic 2023 plea agreement with US authorities under which the exchange paid a $4.3 billion fine, founder Changpeng Zhao stepped down as chief executive, and the company accepted oversight from a Department of Justice-mandated independent compliance monitor.

Binance rejected the latest allegations, stating that its sanctions-related exposure fell 96.8% from 0.284% in January 2024 to 0.009% in July 2025 and asserting:

“The facts are these: Binance’s compliance program is effective and it worked here; any statement to the contrary is simply wrong.”

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