Russia Sanctions 17-Year-Old Who Exposed $110B Crypto Money Laundering Network

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A 17-year-old British student, Alexander Browder, built an open-source crypto money-laundering database that exposed a Russia-linked stablecoin A7A5 which processed over $110 billion in illicit transactions in 2025. The UK sanctioned A7A5 enablers after 26 MPs and Lords pressed the foreign secretary and Russia in turn sanctioned Browder. The revelations raise regulatory and security risks for stablecoins, DeFi, CEX/DEX scrutiny and cross-border crypto adoption, likely prompting tighter enforcement.
- Browder aged 17 exposed A7A5 Russian stablecoin used to evade Western sanctions.
- A7A5 processed over $110 billion in illicit transactions funding Russia in 2025.
- The UK sanctioned A7A5 enablers after 26 MPs and Lords wrote to foreign secretary.
A 17-year-old British student found out he had been sanctioned by Russia while sitting at the back of his economics class. Alexander Browder opened his laptop and saw a Reuters headline with his own name in it.
Russia’s foreign ministry accused him of spreading misinformation. Browder says the real reason is simpler. He spent the past year and a half building the world’s largest open-source database of cryptocurrency money laundering and his work exposed a Russian state-sanctioned stablecoin called A7A5 that processed over $110 billion in illicit transactions in 2025 alone.
“I am going to wear it as a badge of honour. It …
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