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Tipsheet

FBI Says $70M in Illicit Funds Flowed Through E-Note Crypto Service

AP Photo/Koji Sasahara

The federal, state, and local police in Michigan helped dismantle the online infrastructure used to operate E-Note. This cryptocurrency exchange allegedly facilitated money laundering by transnational cybercriminal organizations, including those targeting U.S. healthcare and critical infrastructure. 

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Since 2017, the FBI has identified more than $70 million in illicit proceeds from ransomware attacks and account takeovers transferred via the E-Note payment service and a money mule network, including laundered funds stolen or extorted from U.S. victims.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office also announced the unsealing of an indictment in the Eastern District of Michigan against Mykhalio Petrovich Chudnovets, 39, a Russian national, which charges him with one count of money laundering conspiracy.

According to court documents, Chudnovets began offering money-laundering services to cybercriminals in 2010. Until this seizure by law enforcement, Chudnovets offered money-laundering services through the E-Note payment-processing service, which he controlled and operated. Chudnovets worked with financially motivated cybercriminals to transfer criminal proceeds across international borders and convert them from cryptocurrency into various currencies.

As part of the coordinated actions, U.S. and international law enforcement seized servers hosting Chudnovets’ operations, mobile applications, and the websites “e-note.com,” “e-note.ws,” and “jabb.mn.” U.S. law enforcement separately obtained earlier copies of Chudnovets’ servers, including customer databases and transaction records.

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Chudnovets is charged with one count of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

United States Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon, Jr. and Special Agent in Charge Jennifer Runyan, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Detroit Division, made the announcement.

The FBI Detroit Cyber Task Force is investigating the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy Wyse is prosecuting this case.

The Justice Department also recognizes the critical cooperation of the German Federal Criminal Police Office, the Finnish National Bureau of Investigation, andthe  Michigan State Police Michigan Cyber Command Center (MC3).

Any individual who believes he/she is a victim whose funds were laundered through Chudnovets should reach out to law enforcement via email address e-note-information@fbi.gov.

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