Europol concludes major operation targeting criminal assets and crypto laundering
Investigators found millions in criminal assets through Europol financial intelligence operations.
Europol has concluded the third operational phase of Project A.S.S.E.T., an international initiative focused on criminal asset tracing and money laundering investigations.
The operational phase took place between 19 and 22 May 2026 at Europol headquarters in The Hague and involved law enforcement agencies from 31 countries. More than 40 law enforcement agencies participated, including Asset Recovery Offices, Financial Intelligence Units, and specialised anti-money laundering teams from 31 countries.
The initiative also involved cooperation with Eurojust, INTERPOL, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office, and private-sector financial and cryptocurrency partners.
According to Europol, investigators identified bank accounts, cryptocurrency wallets, companies, vehicles, and real estate assets allegedly linked to criminal activities. Authorities additionally located two suspected criminals, with one arrested through the European Network of Fugitive Active Search Teams.
Europol said the operation generated intelligence related to emerging money laundering techniques and cross-border financial structures associated with organised crime networks. Investigators also reported identifying operational patterns involving cryptocurrencies and international asset concealment practices.
The operation followed an earlier cryptocurrency-focused enforcement phase conducted in October 2025.
European Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner said online fraud and crypto-related crime have become increasingly significant revenue sources for organised criminal groups. Europol officials additionally emphasised that international cooperation and financial intelligence increasingly play a central role in disrupting organised crime ecosystems and recovering illicit proceeds.
Europol said investigations are ongoing and that the full value of identified assets remains under assessment. Follow-up investigations are continuing across participating jurisdictions.
Why does it matter?
The operation reflects growing international focus on financial intelligence, cryptocurrency tracing, and cross-border asset recovery as organised crime groups increasingly rely on digital financial infrastructures. Furthermore, it demonstrates how law enforcement agencies and private-sector financial actors are strengthening cooperation to combat money laundering, online fraud, and illicit cryptocurrency operations across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously.
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