Senate Leaders Warn Crypto Bill Could Create Enforcement Gaps, Attract Illicit Activity

January 19, 2026
Senate Leaders Warn Crypto Bill Could Create Enforcement Gaps, Attract Illicit Activity
  • Senate leaders Grassley and Durbin warn that the draft crypto bill could create enforcement gaps for decentralized platforms, making it harder to prosecute illicit financial activity.

  • They sent a letter to Banking Committee leaders, cautioning that the changes might attract illicit actors and complicate enforcement against unlawful crypto transactions.

  • Crypto industry stakeholders, including Coinbase, have withdrawn initial support amid ongoing negotiations with lawmakers.

  • Coinbase publicly pulled its support for the bill, citing several provisions, even as talks with legislators continue.

  • The debate underscores the broader challenge of balancing regulatory clarity for crypto markets with tools to combat financial crime.

  • The push comes as the Senate Banking and Agriculture committees advance legislation on crypto policing, with a January 12 draft that BRCA-like exemptions would shield crypto software and network maintenance from certain money-transmitter laws.

  • Path forward remains uncertain amid cross-committee delays and the need for 60 votes on the Senate floor, signaling a need for broad bipartisan support.

  • Central dispute centers on language from the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act, which would treat crypto software developers and decentralized networks as not money transmitters, potentially shielding them from some regulations.

  • Judiciary Committee leaders want to remove crypto developer protections from the market structure bill, arguing such protections would weaken unlicensed money transmitting laws.

  • Judiciary Committee says it was not consulted on these changes and urges the Banking Committee to reject language that would undermine accountability for unlicensed money transmitting businesses.

  • Grassley and Durbin assert the bill could hinder prosecuting criminals who already obscure illicit transactions, increasing enforcement challenges.

Summary based on 3 sources


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