Authorities from Switzerland and Germany, with support from Europol and Eurojust, have shut down Cryptomixer — a cryptocurrency‑mixing service used by cybercriminals to launder stolen funds. During the operation, dubbed “Operation Olympia,” law enforcement seized three servers, the Cryptomixer domain, and a significant amount of Bitcoin — reportedly amounting to millions of euros in illicit funds. Cryptomixer operated on both the regular internet and the dark web, pooling deposits from many users and redistributing them across new wallet addresses. This process obscured the origin of the funds, making it extremely difficult for authorities to trace money connected to crimes such as ransomware, drug trafficking, payment‑card fraud and other underground economy activities.
Because of this mixing process, criminals could convert ill‑gotten crypto into “clean” assets before exchanging into fiat currency or different cryptocurrencies, thereby evading detection. Although some services like these argue there may be legitimate uses — for privacy or anonymity — in reality, platforms like Cryptomixer were predominantly exploited by criminals seeking to hide illegally obtained funds. The takedown is part of a broader crackdown on illicit cryptocurrency laundering infrastructure; experts warn that mixing services remain a major enabler for cyber‑crime, and their dismantling is crucial for reducing financial crime in the crypto world.
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