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70,000 US Law Enforcement Professionals Call for Changes to CLARITY Act
More than 70,000 U.S. law enforcement professionals have urged federal officials to revise provisions of the CLARITY Act, warning that broad exemptions could weaken oversight, accountability, and investigative tools used to combat criminal activity involving digital assets.
Key Takeaways:
National Coalition Raises Concerns Over Investigative Limits in CLARITY Act
A coalition representing more than 70,000 U.S. law enforcement professionals has stepped into the debate over the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (CLARITY Act), urging federal officials to revise provisions they say could weaken the ability to investigate crimes involving digital assets.
The June 23 letter was signed by leaders of the National District Attorneys Association, the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, and the National Sheriffs’ Association. Collectively, the organizations represent prosecutors, sheriffs, chiefs of police, criminal investigators, deputies, officers, and other law enforcement professionals across the United States.
The organizations wrote:
Addressed to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Patrick J. Witt, executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, the letter thanked the Administration for engaging with law enforcement while arguing that its principal concerns remain unresolved.
Rather than opposing the legislation outright, the coalition focused on Section 604 of the CLARITY Act, contending that the provision could create broad exemptions that shield individuals or entities involved in facilitating digital asset transactions. The organizations argued that such exemptions could create gaps in oversight and accountability that sophisticated criminal actors may exploit.
CLARITY Act Dispute Centers on Oversight and Compliance
The organizations said digital assets increasingly appear in investigations involving narcotics trafficking, fraud, child exploitation, ransomware attacks, sanctions evasion, terrorism financing, organized retail crime, and other forms of transnational criminal activity. Existing investigative authorities and regulatory frameworks, they argued, help investigators identify suspects, follow financial trails, recover illicit proceeds, and return assets to victims.
Section 604 has drawn the coalition’s strongest criticism. The letter argues that broad exemptions in the CLARITY Act could reduce transparency and accountability by excluding certain market participants from regulatory obligations that currently assist criminal investigations, while emphasizing that the concern is not directed at individuals who merely write or publish software code.
The organizations wrote:
The coalition also challenged other provisions of the CLARITY Act, arguing that parts of the legislation could weaken anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism safeguards relied upon by investigators. The groups said the bill fails to establish a comprehensive set of compliance requirements comparable to those imposed on other financial intermediaries.
The letter specifically identified mixers, tumblers, and certain decentralized finance businesses as categories that could be exempted or excluded from regulatory obligations despite their potential role in facilitating the movement or concealment of illicit funds. The coalition argued that any long-term regulatory framework should preserve transparency, accountability, and investigative authorities while allowing innovation to continue.
The four organizations urged continued engagement with the Administration, Congress, and other stakeholders to refine the CLARITY Act and develop a regulatory framework that promotes responsible innovation while preserving transparency, accountability, and investigative tools.