Railgun has publicly denied any connection with the sanctioned North Korea‘s Lazarus Group using its platform for illicit activities.
In a social media post addressing the allegations, Railgun stated that their system rigorously prevents any sanctioned or malicious users from accessing their services, dismissing the claims as unfounded.
Citing an analysis published by Elliptic, Wu Blockchain posted that the North Korean hacker group Lazarus Group utilized the coin mixer to “launder more than $60 million worth of Ethereum stolen in June 2022.”
The North Korean hacker group Lazarus Group is also a user of the coin mixer Railgun. In January 2023, the US FBI also stated that North Korean cyber attackers used Railgun to launder more than $60 million worth of Ethereum stolen in June 2022. Railgun is seen as the main… https://t.co/N6kjfnFZ4b
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 16, 2024
According to the Elliptic report, North Korea’s Lazarus Group has reportedly shifted its laundering activities to Railgun following US sanctions on Tornado Cash.
“Elliptic’s research suggests that a significant portion of funds – estimated at around 70% – that has been sent through Railgun to date are funds from the Harmony hack,” the report reads.
The analysis also stated that the substantial volume of Ethereum from the Harmony hack passing through Railgun compromised the mixer’s effectiveness.
“On-chain data shows that after sending the funds through Railgun, the Lazarus Group has since deposited funds into three cryptoasset exchanges,” the report reads. “Two, namely Binance and Huobi, have announced that they have identified, blocked and seized a portion of the funds.”
“This is not true and it’s false reporting,” Railgun stated, replying to Wu