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by acdha
3109 days ago
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How did anything get into those wallets in the first place? If it involved any legitimate business or a known address, they know you had something and will follow up. If it’s totally off the books, you need to flee to a few countries with lax banking laws before accessing it because you’ll have to explain either the income or non-trivial purchases (“how does a guy reporting $100k salary buy a $500k house in cash?” is the kind of thing which routinely catches small scale crooks). Do any of that wrong, well, you probably lied to a federal agent and can face severe penalties for that alone. |
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Instead of a shoebox or an off-site safe you would just use a wallet and deposit crypto into that. The crypto could be purchased using something like localmonero or anonymously deposited by a friend who you give cash to.
Crypto currencies like monero have built in privacy so it’s possible to have anonymous transactions where it’s hard for police to trace the origins:
https://www.monero.how/why-monero-vs-bitcoin
It’s also possible to obtain monero without going through a bank or showing identification (as mentioned above):
https://localmonero.co
Now I’m sure some people will be caught doing stuff like this in the same way that some people get caught today avoiding paying taxes. My point is that it’s possible to do and it’s likely going to get easier to do.
The big change with crypto is that it makes it much easier to do the above and move it across borders. It will be interesting to see how governments try to restrict this.