Indian Government Ramps Up Crypto Enforcement Training Amidst Regulatory Drive


The Indian government is undertaking a massive, coordinated effort to significantly ramp up crypto enforcement training across its financial and law enforcement agencies. This strategic capacity building is a direct response to the growing complexity of crypto-enabled financial crimes, the mandatory registration of Virtual Digital Asset Service Providers (VDASPs) with the Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND), and the country’s overall shift from regulatory amlargeuity to structured oversight. The initiative focuses on equipping investigators with advanced tools and knowledge to effectively trace, seize, and prosecute crimes involving virtual digital assets (VDAs).
Multi-Agency Focus on Blockchain Forensics
Training is being disseminated across a wide array of government bodies, reflecting the multi-institutional nature of India’s crypto oversight. Key agencies involved include the Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND), which is the central national agency for combating money laundering; the Directorate of Enforcement (ED), which investigates financial crimes; the Narcotic Control Bureau (NCB), due to the use of crypto in drug trafficking; and the vast network of the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) and state police forces. The Ministry of Home Affairs previously reported training thousands of police officers in digital currency investigation techniques, a number that is now rapidly expanding. Specialized courses cover: blockchain forensics for tracing funds across multiple chains, on-chain analysis to identify illicit activity, techniques for crypto asset seizure and custody, and methods to uncover the real-world identities behind pseudo-anonymous wallet addresses. This training is crucial because the pseudo-anonymous nature of transactions and the use of obfuscation techniques like mixers make traditional financial investigative methods ineffective.
Aligning Enforcement with PMLA and Tax Compliance
The renewed focus on enforcement training is a direct consequence of the government’s move to bring VDAs under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) of 2002. By classifying crypto platforms and other VDASPs as “reporting entities,” the government mandated them to comply with strict Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) norms, including the filing of suspicious transaction reports. The government’s enforcement machinery must now possess the technical expertise to audit these reports and investigate non-compliance effectively. Furthermore, the rigorous crypto taxation regime—including the flat 30% tax on gains and the 1% Tax Deducted at Source (TDS)—requires enforcement bodies like the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) to verify disclosures and pursue cases of tax evasion, necessitating specialized training in transaction verification and crypto income auditing. The ultimate goal is to build an integrated compliance ecosystem that strengthens governance, protects investors, and aligns India’s VDA sector with international standards set by bodies like the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). This investment in capacity building signals the government’s firm resolve to legitimize the crypto ecosystem through strict monitoring and effective prosecution of criminal abuse.






