Two crypto provisions addressing anti-money-laundering concerns were dropped from a joint version of the National Defense Authorization Act, a military-funding bill viewed as must-pass legislation, ending a backdoor effort to get digital-asset rules passed this year in the U.S.
According to a joint bill published Thursday by lawmakers from the U.S. House and Senate, provisions that would create an anti-money-laundering examination standard for crypto assets and require a report analyzing the use of privacy coins or other “anonymity-enhancing technologies” in crypto were dropped. The House of Representatives version of the NDAA did not contain the provisions that the Senate version did.
The NDAA details the military budget for the upcoming year, though as one of the U.S.’s few must-pass bills, it’s often amended with various other provisions.
Senate amendments included one for the Secretary of the Treasury “to establish a risk-focused examination and review process for financial institutions” to look at whether reporting obligations for crypto assets under money-laundering rules were adequate and whether firms were compliant.
The other would direct the Treasury Department to produce and publish a report on the use of mixers and tumblers, the magnitude of transactions using privacy tools,