
FBI Seizes Crypto Exchange in Major Money Laundering Takedown
In a significant international law enforcement action, the FBI has seized the infrastructure of a cryptocurrency exchange allegedly used to launder over $70 million from ransomware attacks and other cybercrimes. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan announced the operation, which involved cooperation with Michigan State Police and foreign agencies, targeting a service known as E-Note.
Alleged Operator and Criminal Charges
Prosecutors unsealed an indictment against Mykhalio Petrovich Chudnovets, a 39-year-old Russian national accused of operating the E-Note service. Chudnovets is charged with one count of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, an offense carrying a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. Authorities allege he began offering money laundering services to cybercriminals as early as 2010 before formalizing the operation through E-Note around 2017.
Scale and Operation of the E-Note Service
According to court documents, E-Note functioned as a virtual currency service that moved criminal proceeds across international borders and converted cryptocurrency into various fiat currencies. The indictment states Chudnovets initially used individual “money mules” before scaling his operations through the online business. Investigators have identified more than $70 million in illicit proceeds from ransomware attacks, account takeovers, and other cyber-enabled crimes transferred through E-Note’s network since 2017.
Law Enforcement Actions and Seizures
As part of the coordinated takedown, authorities seized servers hosting E-Note’s operations, mobile applications, and the websites “e-note.com,” “e-note.ws,” and “jabb.mn.” Investigators also obtained earlier server copies containing customer databases and transaction records, which are expected to aid ongoing investigations into transnational cybercriminal organizations, including groups that attacked U.S. healthcare systems and critical infrastructure.
E-Note’s Low Profile and International Connections
Despite the substantial volume of alleged laundering activity, E-Note maintained a remarkably low public profile. Several blockchain crime experts contacted for comment indicated unfamiliarity with the service. An archived version of its website suggested it was powered by “E Note International FZ-LLC,” a company type primarily used by entities based in Free Zones in the United Arab Emirates, highlighting the international dimensions of the operation.
Broader Context of Crypto Crime Crackdown
This takedown occurs amid an intensifying U.S. law enforcement crackdown on cryptocurrency-enabled crime. Recent weeks have seen multiple significant actions, including Florida authorities seizing $1.5 million in crypto tied to investment scams, federal prosecutors charging a Ukrainian woman in connection with pro-Russia cyberattacking groups, and a California man pleading guilty to being part of a RICO-designated crypto theft ring linked to over $263 million in stolen assets.
The Rising Tide of Crypto Crime
Despite increased enforcement, cryptocurrency crime continues to surge. According to Chainalysis, $3.4 billion in cryptocurrency has been stolen so far this year, with North Korea-linked actors accounting for approximately 59% of those losses. Separately, the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reported receiving about 3,200 cryptocurrency investment fraud complaints each month earlier this year, indicating the scale of the challenge facing regulators and law enforcement.
The E-Note case represents a significant victory in the ongoing battle against cybercrime financing, demonstrating how international cooperation and blockchain analysis can disrupt sophisticated money laundering networks that exploit cryptocurrency’s borderless nature.



