South Korean Police, Prosecutors Quadruple Spending on Crypto Monitoring Tools
Tim Alper is a British journalist and features writer who has worked at Cryptonews.com since 2018. He has written for media outlets such as the BBC, the Guardian, and Chosun Ilbo. He has also worked...
- Naver-Dunamu Crypto ‘Mega-Company’ Could Be Worth $2.1B a Year – Experts
- Russia Losing ‘Millions of Dollars a Year to Illegal Crypto Miners’ – Report
- Russian Economist: BTC Will Hit $120k-$130k Again Before End of Year
- Russia’s Central Bank: Tokenization Will Let Foreigners Buy Domestic Shares
- S Korean Tax Agency: Pay Your Bills or We’ll Take Your Crypto Cold Wallets

South Korean police and prosecutors have quadrupled the amount of money they are spending on crypto monitoring tools in the past 12 months.
Per Chosun Ilbo, law enforcers have spent some $2.4 million on crypto monitoring software and crypto-specific training for officers in the past year. Last year, that figure stood at $653,000.
Police forces across the country have been forming specialized crypto units, which has led to an increase in spending. But, the media outlet explained, officers now how tools that allow them to trace crypto transactions back to individual IP addresses.
They also have tools that allow them to monitor crypto transaction details in real-time, examine activity on exchanges, and verify “source information” on crypto remittances.
Part of the spending is likely attributable to the police force’s crackdown on crypto-powered drug trafficking.
Darkweb operators have been operating portals that allow buyers to find local dealers – and pay in bitcoin (BTC) for dead-dropped narcotics. While the dark web portals are still extant, police have had more luck finding and prosecuting dealers and drug buyers.
Crypto Monitoring Tools: Why South Korean Police Are Spending Big on Them
National Police Agency (NPA) statistics show that 1,174 of the 3,033 drug offenders arrested by the police between March to May this year used crypto to buy or sell narcotics. That represents an increase of some 32% in the same period in 2021.
The media outlet noted that the NPA had bought crypto tracking systems for its National Investigation Headquarters, its narcotics and organized crime investigation division, and its economic crime department.
Prosecutors have also been investing: the Supreme Prosecutor’s Office, the Seoul Central District Prosecutor’s Office, and the Seoul Eastern District Prosecutor’s Office have all bought crypto tracking solutions.
Customs officials have likely bought their own systems, too – as part of their own fight against illegal kimchi premium trading.
Additional expenditure has also been incurred by officers investigating the Terra ecosystem crash and the role Terraform Labs may have played in the incident.
Police and prosecutors are also stepping up investigations into alleged attacks on domestic crypto targets that they suspect originate from North Korea.
- [LIVE] Fed Payments Innovation Conference: Real-Time Updates as Federal Reserve Discusses Crypto, Stablecoins, and AI with Industry Leaders
- Crypto Market Prospect: After the Washout, the Soil Looks Richer
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: Why $88,000 Could Be the Calm Before a $94,000 Push
- XRP Price Prediction: $1.9bn ETF Inflows Put $2.15 Breakout Back in Play
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: Fundstrat Tells Clients to Brace for a $60K Bitcoin Correction Next Year
About Us
2M+
250+
8
70
Market Overview
- 7d
- 1m
- 1y
- [LIVE] Fed Payments Innovation Conference: Real-Time Updates as Federal Reserve Discusses Crypto, Stablecoins, and AI with Industry Leaders
- Crypto Market Prospect: After the Washout, the Soil Looks Richer
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: Why $88,000 Could Be the Calm Before a $94,000 Push
- XRP Price Prediction: $1.9bn ETF Inflows Put $2.15 Breakout Back in Play
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: Fundstrat Tells Clients to Brace for a $60K Bitcoin Correction Next Year
More Articles
Get dialed in every Tuesday & Friday with quick updates on the world of crypto