Home News Andrew Tate’s Crypto Wallets Tied to $30 Million Money Laundering Trail

Andrew Tate’s Crypto Wallets Tied to $30 Million Money Laundering Trail

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Andrew Tate’s Crypto Wallets Tied to $30 Million Money Laundering Trail

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  • An on-chain investigator alleges that wallets linked to Andrew Tate received about $1.2 million traced to a Texas investment fraud case.
  • The investigator also claimed that Tate-linked entities routed roughly $30 million in crypto through the Railgun privacy protocol.
  • Separately, the investigator alleges Tate staged public statements to influence market sentiment while covertly controlling the wallets involved.

A December 27 report by a pseudonymous on-chain investigator, Specter, alleges that Tate’s digital asset activities extend beyond speculative trading into potential money laundering.

The analysis claims that specific blockchain addresses allegedly linked to Tate received approximately $1.2 million. The funds reportedly came from wallets named in a Texas lawsuit tied to a $5 million investment scam.

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Tate Wallets Allegedly Received Funds From $5 Million US Scam

According to Specter, court documents from a March 2025 filing in Texas identify a network of wallets used to launder money stolen from victims between January 2023 and February 2025.

Specter’s analysis shows that one of these defendant wallets transferred $1.2 million to the address “0x9B67.”

The investigator linked “0x9B67” to Tate through a series of on-chain interactions, including a direct $4 transfer on December 14, 2024, from Tate’s known public address to the suspect crypto wallet.

Andrew Tate (@Cobratate ) may allegedly be involved in money laundering activity.

Wallets linked to him have deposited up to $30M into Railgun over the past two years and have also been linked to a pig-butchering scam case.

On June 9, 2024, Andrew Tate posted a DM screenshot… pic.twitter.com/MDZyNzP56K

— Specter (@SpecterAnalyst) December 27, 2025

Additionally, the wallet’s trading patterns on the decentralized exchange Hyperliquid mirror Tate’s public disclosure of his trading activity.

While Tate is not currently a named defendant in the Texas fraud case, victim funds have been identified in wallets allegedly linked to him. That connection could expose him to potential US civil forfeiture actions.

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This link to a US-based fraud investigation could complicate his existing legal defense in Europe by triggering cross-border cooperation between the DOJ and Romanian authorities.

Railgun Transfers

Meanwhile, the report further details significant capital flows into Railgun, a privacy pool designed to anonymize transaction history.

Over a two-year period, Tate-linked entities allegedly deposited $30 million into the crypto protocol. The majority of these funds originated from Radom Pay, a crypto payment processor.

Compliance officers typically flag high-volume use of legal privacy tools by individuals under active indictment as a potential layering technique meant to obscure the source of funds.

Specter’s investigation also suggests Tate manipulated market sentiment by fabricating public statements. The analyst highlighted a June 2024 incident where Tate shared a screenshot claiming he had rejected an offer to promote a token.

However, Specter said blockchain data shows the wallet in the screenshot was funded by Tate. He added that the activity indicates Tate also controlled the wallet, despite claims it belonged to a third-party promoter.

This suggests he staged the “rejection” to bolster his reputation for integrity while covertly managing the assets.

As of press time, Tate has not responded to these allegations.

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