Brazilian authorities have frozen approximately 1.04 billion Brazilian reais (about $2 billion) in assets, bank accounts, and cryptocurrencies as part of a major investigation into an alleged money laundering network accused of moving illicit proceeds through digital assets and conventional financial channels.
The asset freeze follows coordinated enforcement action between Brazilian and U.S. authorities after the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned two Brazilian nationals and four companies accused of supporting financial operations for the Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), one of Brazil’s largest organized crime groups.
The operation, known as Operation Exchange, involved more than 50 Federal Police officers executing 11 temporary arrest warrants and 13 search and seizure warrants across São Paulo state. Searches were carried out in São Paulo, Santos, Praia Grande, and Santana de Parnaíba, targeting individuals and businesses suspected of participating in a complex money laundering network.
Authorities confirmed that Stella Stefanie Nunes Henrique de Oliveira was arrested during the operation, while Victor Henrique de Oliveira Shimada, another suspect named in the U.S. sanctions, remained at large.
Brazilian investigators allege the organization relied on cryptocurrency alongside traditional financial methods to conceal the movement of illicit funds. According to the Federal Police, the investigation identified several methods used to transfer money, including:
Police said preliminary financial analysis identified transactions exceeding 11 billion reais, prompting the court to freeze assets, bank funds, valuables, and cryptocurrencies connected to the suspects while the investigation continues.
The Brazilian operation came two days after OFAC sanctioned Shimada, Oliveira, and four companies for allegedly facilitating money laundering linked to the PCC. The case reflects a broader enforcement trend in which U.S. Treasury sanctions crypto wallets and related entities suspected of supporting transnational criminal organizations. According to the U.S. Treasury, the network allegedly laundered more than $30 million in proceeds generated from international drug trafficking. Investigators said cryptocurrency was used to move funds between criminal associates operating in the United States and Brazil.
The sanctions also covered three Brazilian companies, Victory Trading, Pixwave Soluções e Pagamentos, and Wave Construções Inteligentes, along with Portugal-based Owens Avenadas, which U.S. authorities allege formed part of the financial infrastructure supporting the laundering network.
Earlier this year, U.S. prosecutors charged six individuals connected to the Florida side of the investigation, indicating that authorities believe the alleged operation extended beyond Brazil.
Investigators emphasized that cryptocurrency was only one component of a broader financial network. Authorities allege the suspects combined blockchain transactions with banking activity and commercial transfers to make illicit funds more difficult to trace. The case highlights how the rapid growth of digital banking in Brazil has created new opportunities for financial innovation while also requiring stronger oversight to prevent misuse by criminal organizations.
The investigation also highlights the increasing use of blockchain analysis alongside conventional financial investigations as law enforcement agencies pursue cross-border money laundering cases involving digital assets. Recent enforcement actions across the industry, including instances where Tether freezes USDT linked to suspicious activity, demonstrate how private-sector compliance measures are increasingly complementing government investigations into illicit financial networks.
Brazilian authorities said the suspects could face charges including money laundering, criminal association, tax evasion, and other financial offenses depending on the evidence collected during the investigation.


