Binance is reportedly negotiating an early termination of the court-appointed compliance monitor. The move shows the potential thawing of regulated frosts, allowing the exchange to be released from key terms of the historic $4.3 billion settlement.
summary
Binance has negotiated with the DOJ to close the court-appointed compliance monitor earlier than planned, according to Bloomberg. The monitor was part of a $4.3 billion settlement that resolved money laundering and sanctions violations.
On September 16, Bloomberg reported that Binance Holdings Ltd. was in confidential negotiations with the U.S. Department of Justice, and that the court-appointed compliance monitor was being held to close earlier than planned.
Monitor, Forensic Risk Alliance, was appointed for three years in 2023 as part of the exchange’s groundbreaking $4.3 billion plea deal, to resolve allegations of severe money laundering and sanctions violations. This potential early release illustrates a major shift in DOJ’s enforcement strategy for corporate oversight.
Rare re-adjustment of monitoring
According to a Bloomberg report cited individuals familiar with confidential negotiations, the willingness to consider DOJ termination comes from a reassessment of broader policies under the current administration.
The shift was telegraphed in an April memo that said the Justice Department was “not a digital asset regulator,” and instead of overlapping regulatory frameworks, prioritizing cases involving clearer federal crimes such as terrorism and hacking.
This new directive appears to be the main driver behind the reevaluation of Binance’s monitor ship. This suggests that prosecutors can see surveillance that goes beyond their intended duties.
The Forensic Risk Alliance, a company appointed in May 2024, was tasked with auditing control of vinance under a plea agreement. Frances McLeod, founding partner of the FRA, was set up to oversee Manesial’s supervision and sanctions laws and to test the effectiveness of its improvement program. This type of independent monitor rarely lifts up ahead of time what underscores the importance of these discussions.
Binance doubles compliance
Since the settlement, Binance has moved aggressively to strengthen its compliance record. The Wall Street Journal reported that Exchange spent an estimated $200 million on compliance in 2024 alone. This is a number that coincides with CEO Richard Teng’s strategy of making regulatory compliance a “competitive advantage.”
Teng is the former regulator himself, who was at the helm of an exchange from Changpeng Zhao, and has set up a new seven-person board, moving the company away from the previous central leadership structure.
On the other hand, it is important to note that the DOJ monitor is just one of the much bigger execution puzzles. Binance’s global $4.3 billion settlement also included another five-year surveillance with the Department of Treasury’s Financial Crime Enforcement Network, which appointed monitors from Sullivan & Cromwell.
The deal was part of a record $3.4 billion settlement with Fincen, and a $968 million settlement with OFAC that allowed more than 1.67 million transactions between US users and authorized jurisdictions. There is yet no indication that these separate Treasury mandatory monitorships have received similar reviews.
