Hong Kong Court Rejects Bitcoin Defense in HK$64M Laundering Case

What You Need to Know
- Xiao Rui convicted of four money laundering counts and one false document count in Hong Kong.
- Court rejected his Bitcoin sales defense, finding no transaction dates, wallet addresses, or reference numbers provided.
- Actual laundering used underground banking and accounts at Standard Chartered, DBS, and HSBC over nearly a decade.
- Xiao submitted fabricated deposit certificates for Hong Kong residency application under Capital Investment Entrant Scheme.
A Hong Kong district court has convicted Xiao Rui on four counts of money laundering and one count of using a false document, rejecting his claim that a portion of the HK$64 million flowing through his accounts came from Bitcoin sales. The court found he could not produce a single transaction date, reference number, or wallet address to support that claim.
The Bitcoin defense was always thin, but its failure here carries weight beyond this case. Courts in multiple jurisdictions have become increasingly skeptical of crypto provenance claims precisely because they are difficult to disprove without proper records, and defendants have learned to exploit that ambiguity. Acting Judge Bernard Chung’s reasoning flips that dynamic: the same pseudonymity that makes crypto hard to trace also makes undocumented claims about it easy to dismiss. The broader context is that Hong Kong has been actively positioning itself as a regulated crypto hub since 2022, and a court publicly discrediting a crypto alibi sends a clear signal about evidentiary standards defendants should expect in that jurisdiction.
The actual laundering here was old-fashioned: underground banking channels, accounts at Standard Chartered, DBS, and HSBC, and 38 transactions spread across nearly a decade. Crypto was the cover story, not the mechanism.
The case also involves a separate fraud tied to Xiao’s Hong Kong residency application under the Capital Investment Entrant Scheme, where he submitted fabricated deposit certificates from a China Construction Bank branch in Wuhan. That scheme required demonstrated assets above HK$10 million, and the accounts listed on his documents did not exist. His father, a former official at the Wuhan People’s Procuratorate who was previously suspended amid a mainland corruption investigation, is implicated through a contractor who deposited HK$4.72 million into Xiao’s account after reportedly receiving assistance securing a municipal contract. The ICAC has requested confiscation of criminal proceeds, though no hearing date has been set for that.
Xiao faces up to 14 years on the money laundering charges and remains in custody ahead of his July 23 sentencing.
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