[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":674},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article-common-mistakes-crypto-investigations":3,"content-query-2Ov4QllFg2":394},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"slug":10,"date":11,"lastUpdated":12,"author":13,"readingTime":14,"category":15,"tags":16,"ogImage":21,"featured":6,"body":22,"_type":387,"_id":388,"_source":389,"_file":390,"_stem":391,"_extension":392,"sitemap":393},"\u002Farticles\u002F05-common-mistakes-crypto-investigations","articles",false,"","Common Mistakes in Cryptocurrency Investigations","Eight critical mistakes attorneys and investigators make in cryptocurrency cases, why they matter, and how to avoid them before they compromise your investigation.","common-mistakes-crypto-investigations","2026-04-21","2025-04-21","Nick Kampe",9,"Methodology",[17,18,19,20],"investigation","forensics","mistakes","best practices","\u002Fog\u002Fcommon-mistakes-crypto-investigations.png",{"type":23,"children":24,"toc":374},"root",[25,33,38,45,50,55,60,65,71,76,81,86,100,106,111,116,121,134,140,145,150,155,167,173,178,183,188,193,199,204,209,214,220,225,230,235,240,246,251,256,261,274,280,285,298,302,308,317,322,330,335,343,348,356,361,369],{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":28,"children":29},"element","p",{},[30],{"type":31,"value":32},"text","Cryptocurrency investigations fail for a predictable set of reasons. The same errors appear across case types, whether the matter involves divorce asset concealment, business fraud, theft, or regulatory enforcement. Most of these mistakes are avoidable. Many of them become significantly more difficult to correct once the investigation is already underway. Understanding them before you begin is more valuable than discovering them midway through.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":34,"children":35},{},[36],{"type":31,"value":37},"The following are the errors that matter most, based on how often they occur and how seriously they compromise an investigation when they do.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":40,"children":42},"h2",{"id":41},"mistake-1-not-preserving-evidence-immediately",[43],{"type":31,"value":44},"Mistake 1: Not Preserving Evidence Immediately",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":46,"children":47},{},[48],{"type":31,"value":49},"Digital evidence has a finite window before it becomes unavailable. Exchange data retention policies typically run five to seven years, but some platforms retain less. More critically, exchanges may suspend or close accounts that are subjects of investigations, and private wallets can be emptied and the funds moved to new addresses in minutes if a party becomes aware that they are under scrutiny.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":51,"children":52},{},[53],{"type":31,"value":54},"The window for effective evidence preservation is often shorter than the timeline of the legal proceedings. By the time a case reaches the stage where forensic analysis is requested, months may have passed since the conduct at issue. If the investigation has not been initiated promptly, some evidence may already be gone.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":56,"children":57},{},[58],{"type":31,"value":59},"The practical implication is straightforward: when cryptocurrency is relevant to a matter, identify and preserve the evidence before doing anything else that might alert the opposing party. This means serving subpoenas to exchanges early, identifying device evidence while devices are still in the party's possession, and beginning blockchain analysis before the relevant wallet addresses become active in ways that complicate the picture.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":61,"children":62},{},[63],{"type":31,"value":64},"Early engagement with a forensic analyst is not a luxury for complex cases. It is a standard practice that improves outcomes across all case types.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":66,"children":68},{"id":67},"mistake-2-relying-solely-on-exchange-subpoena-responses",[69],{"type":31,"value":70},"Mistake 2: Relying Solely on Exchange Subpoena Responses",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":72,"children":73},{},[74],{"type":31,"value":75},"Subpoenas to cryptocurrency exchanges are a critical part of the investigation toolkit. They produce KYC documentation, transaction histories, linked bank accounts, IP logs, and device fingerprints. When a party has used a regulated domestic exchange, the subpoena response can be the single most important piece of evidence in the case.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":77,"children":78},{},[79],{"type":31,"value":80},"The mistake is treating the exchange response as the complete picture. Parties with meaningful cryptocurrency holdings often use multiple exchanges, and frequently use self-custody wallets for a portion of their holdings. A party who reports holdings at one exchange but fails to disclose additional wallets has not been caught by a single subpoena.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":82,"children":83},{},[84],{"type":31,"value":85},"The blockchain itself tells you more than any individual exchange can. By tracing transactions outward from the addresses identified in the exchange response, an analyst can identify where else the party sent funds, what other wallets they control, and whether those wallets subsequently moved to different exchanges. The exchange subpoena establishes the starting point; blockchain tracing extends the picture beyond it.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":87,"children":88},{},[89,91,98],{"type":31,"value":90},"See ",{"type":26,"tag":92,"props":93,"children":95},"a",{"href":94},"\u002Fresources\u002Fsubpoenaing-cryptocurrency-exchange-records",[96],{"type":31,"value":97},"Subpoenaing Cryptocurrency Exchange Records",{"type":31,"value":99}," for guidance on structuring the initial subpoena request and identifying which exchanges to target.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":101,"children":103},{"id":102},"mistake-3-conflating-addresses-with-identities",[104],{"type":31,"value":105},"Mistake 3: Conflating Addresses with Identities",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":107,"children":108},{},[109],{"type":31,"value":110},"This is the most consequential analytical error in blockchain forensics. An analyst traces funds from a known wallet to a new address and concludes, based on clustering heuristics, that the new address belongs to the same controller. The analysis of the on-chain data may be correct. But the conclusion that the controller of the new address is the specific individual under investigation requires additional attribution evidence.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":112,"children":113},{},[114],{"type":31,"value":115},"The blockchain shows what addresses did. It does not directly show who controlled those addresses. Attribution, meaning the connection of an address to a real-world identity, requires off-chain evidence: exchange records, device forensics, signed message evidence, or other documentation that ties the key material to a specific person.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":117,"children":118},{},[119],{"type":31,"value":120},"Expert testimony that overstates the attribution is a credibility problem waiting to happen. When opposing counsel asks the expert to explain the specific evidence connecting the identified address to the defendant, an answer that amounts to \"the clustering analysis suggests it\" is not sufficient. A well-constructed attribution case layers the on-chain analysis with the off-chain evidence and states conclusions at the level the evidence supports.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":122,"children":123},{},[124,126,132],{"type":31,"value":125},"For a full treatment of how ownership is established, see ",{"type":26,"tag":92,"props":127,"children":129},{"href":128},"\u002Fresources\u002Funderstanding-wallet-ownership-evidence",[130],{"type":31,"value":131},"Understanding Wallet Ownership Evidence",{"type":31,"value":133},".",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":135,"children":137},{"id":136},"mistake-4-ignoring-defi-activity",[138],{"type":31,"value":139},"Mistake 4: Ignoring DeFi Activity",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":141,"children":142},{},[143],{"type":31,"value":144},"Decentralized finance protocols, including decentralized exchanges, lending platforms, and liquidity pools, have become a substantial part of how cryptocurrency is used and held. A party who has routed funds through DeFi protocols has created a transaction trail that looks very different from a simple transfer between wallets.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":146,"children":147},{},[148],{"type":31,"value":149},"DeFi activity does not appear in exchange records, because there is no exchange in the traditional sense. The user interacts directly with a smart contract deployed on a blockchain, and the entire transaction history is recorded on-chain. But the records require different analytical techniques than straightforward Bitcoin or Ethereum transfers. Understanding what liquidity positions a party held, what yield they earned from those positions, and what their unrealized gains looked like at a given point in time requires specific knowledge of the protocols involved.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":151,"children":152},{},[153],{"type":31,"value":154},"Investigators who are not familiar with DeFi often miss this activity entirely, either because they do not know to look for it or because they do not know how to interpret what they find. The result is an incomplete picture of the party's holdings and a forensic report that excludes a potentially significant portion of their assets.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":156,"children":157},{},[158,159,165],{"type":31,"value":90},{"type":26,"tag":92,"props":160,"children":162},{"href":161},"\u002Fresources\u002Fwhat-lawyers-need-to-know-about-defi",[163],{"type":31,"value":164},"What Lawyers Need to Know About DeFi",{"type":31,"value":166}," for a substantive treatment of how DeFi works and why it creates distinctive investigative challenges.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":168,"children":170},{"id":169},"mistake-5-not-accounting-for-forks-and-airdrops",[171],{"type":31,"value":172},"Mistake 5: Not Accounting for Forks and Airdrops",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":174,"children":175},{},[176],{"type":31,"value":177},"Cryptocurrency networks occasionally split into two chains through a process called a fork. When this happens, holders of the original cryptocurrency typically receive an equivalent amount of the new cryptocurrency at the moment of the fork. Bitcoin, for example, has forked multiple times, producing Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV as separate assets that holders of Bitcoin received automatically based on their balance at the time of each fork.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":179,"children":180},{},[181],{"type":31,"value":182},"Similarly, protocols sometimes distribute new tokens to existing holders through airdrops, without the holders taking any active steps to claim them. These distributions can have significant value.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":184,"children":185},{},[186],{"type":31,"value":187},"The relevance to litigation is that a party's cryptocurrency holdings at a given time may include assets they acquired passively through forks and airdrops, and a financial disclosure that omits those assets is incomplete. Conversely, a valuation that does not account for forked assets may substantially understate the value of the holdings.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":189,"children":190},{},[191],{"type":31,"value":192},"An investigator who does not account for the fork history of the relevant blockchains, and the airdrop history of the relevant protocols, will produce an incomplete asset inventory. This is a specialized enough area that it often goes unexamined, making it a place where thorough forensic analysis can add meaningful value.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":194,"children":196},{"id":195},"mistake-6-misunderstanding-wallet-software-vs-the-blockchain",[197],{"type":31,"value":198},"Mistake 6: Misunderstanding Wallet Software vs. the Blockchain",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":200,"children":201},{},[202],{"type":31,"value":203},"A common source of confusion in investigations is the distinction between what a wallet application shows and what the blockchain actually records. Wallet software is a user interface that reads data from the blockchain and presents it in a convenient format. The wallet itself does not store cryptocurrency. The funds are on the blockchain. The wallet software reads the blockchain and shows the user their balance.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":205,"children":206},{},[207],{"type":31,"value":208},"The practical implication is that deleting wallet software from a device does not delete the on-chain record. The transactions that occurred from the associated addresses remain permanently recorded on the blockchain. The wallet application's locally stored data on the device may be recoverable through device forensics even after the application is deleted, but the on-chain record is recoverable regardless of what happens to the device.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":210,"children":211},{},[212],{"type":31,"value":213},"This distinction also matters for valuation. The balance shown by a wallet application at a specific moment in time reflects the blockchain state at that moment. If a party screenshots their wallet to show a low balance during a disclosure period, the actual transaction history of the underlying addresses is available on the blockchain and may tell a different story.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":215,"children":217},{"id":216},"mistake-7-overlooking-on-ramp-and-off-ramp-patterns",[218],{"type":31,"value":219},"Mistake 7: Overlooking On-Ramp and Off-Ramp Patterns",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":221,"children":222},{},[223],{"type":31,"value":224},"Cryptocurrency needs to be acquired with traditional currency and often needs to be converted back to traditional currency at some point. These conversion points, called on-ramps and off-ramps, are where the cryptocurrency ecosystem intersects most directly with the regulated financial system and where the most comprehensive records are available.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":226,"children":227},{},[228],{"type":31,"value":229},"Common on-ramps include purchases through exchanges, peer-to-peer trading platforms, Bitcoin ATMs, and over-the-counter brokers. Common off-ramps include the same channels in reverse. Each of these conversion points typically involves some form of record keeping, and many of them involve regulated entities that are subject to subpoena.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":231,"children":232},{},[233],{"type":31,"value":234},"Investigators who focus only on the on-chain record and do not examine the on-ramp and off-ramp activity miss the points where cryptocurrency connects to the traditional financial system. The purchase history at an exchange tells you when and how cryptocurrency was acquired. The off-ramp history tells you when and how it was converted back to cash, and where that cash went.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":236,"children":237},{},[238],{"type":31,"value":239},"Looking at a party's bank records alongside their exchange records often reveals patterns that neither record set shows clearly on its own: cryptocurrency purchases followed by a decline in banking activity, periodic transfers to exchanges followed by corresponding bank deposits, or cryptocurrency activity that aligns suspiciously with unexplained cash flows.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":241,"children":243},{"id":242},"mistake-8-not-retaining-a-technical-expert-early-enough",[244],{"type":31,"value":245},"Mistake 8: Not Retaining a Technical Expert Early Enough",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":247,"children":248},{},[249],{"type":31,"value":250},"The most pervasive mistake in cryptocurrency litigation is treating forensic analysis as a late-stage activity. Attorneys who begin thinking about expert analysis only after discovery has closed, or when the matter is approaching trial, frequently find that the available evidence has deteriorated, the timeline for analysis is too compressed to produce high-quality work, and the strategy for using blockchain evidence was not integrated into the discovery plan.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":252,"children":253},{},[254],{"type":31,"value":255},"Early expert involvement changes the investigation fundamentally. A forensic analyst who is engaged at the outset of a matter can help identify which exchanges to subpoena and in what order, advise on what device evidence to preserve and how, flag potential evidentiary issues before they become problems, and structure the blockchain analysis to fit the specific legal theories at issue.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":257,"children":258},{},[259],{"type":31,"value":260},"The analysis itself takes time, particularly in complex matters involving multiple blockchains, DeFi activity, or deliberate obfuscation. Rushing that analysis at the end of a discovery period increases the risk of errors and limits the analyst's ability to address complications that arise during the work.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":262,"children":263},{},[264,266,272],{"type":31,"value":265},"Retaining a forensic expert at the same time you retain other financial experts, rather than treating cryptocurrency as a specialty to be addressed later, is the practice that consistently produces better results. See ",{"type":26,"tag":92,"props":267,"children":269},{"href":268},"\u002Fservices",[270],{"type":31,"value":271},"ConsensusIntel's services",{"type":31,"value":273}," for how we structure engagements to support the litigation timeline from initial engagement through trial.",{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":275,"children":277},{"id":276},"building-on-solid-ground",[278],{"type":31,"value":279},"Building on Solid Ground",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":281,"children":282},{},[283],{"type":31,"value":284},"Most of these mistakes share a common theme: treating cryptocurrency investigation as a peripheral or late-stage concern rather than integrating it into the core strategy of the matter from the beginning. The blockchain does not forgive gaps in the investigative approach. But the blockchain also does not forget. For cases where the evidence was preserved and the analysis was done correctly, the on-chain record provides a level of detail and permanence that investigators in other asset categories rarely have access to.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":286,"children":287},{},[288,290,296],{"type":31,"value":289},"For guidance specific to your matter, ",{"type":26,"tag":92,"props":291,"children":293},{"href":292},"\u002Fcontact",[294],{"type":31,"value":295},"contact ConsensusIntel",{"type":31,"value":297},". A brief conversation about the facts often clarifies what the available evidence can show and what approach makes the most sense given your timeline and litigation strategy.",{"type":26,"tag":299,"props":300,"children":301},"hr",{},[],{"type":26,"tag":39,"props":303,"children":305},{"id":304},"frequently-asked-questions",[306],{"type":31,"value":307},"Frequently Asked Questions",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":309,"children":310},{},[311],{"type":26,"tag":312,"props":313,"children":314},"strong",{},[315],{"type":31,"value":316},"What should I do if I only just discovered that cryptocurrency may be an issue in my case?",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":318,"children":319},{},[320],{"type":31,"value":321},"Act immediately on evidence preservation. The most time-sensitive step is identifying and subpoenaing exchanges that may hold relevant records. Blockchain analysis can be done at any time, since the on-chain record is permanent, but exchange data retention policies mean that institutional records may be lost if not preserved promptly. Engage a forensic analyst as soon as possible to help triage the most urgent preservation steps.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":323,"children":324},{},[325],{"type":26,"tag":312,"props":326,"children":327},{},[328],{"type":31,"value":329},"How do I know which exchanges to subpoena?",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":331,"children":332},{},[333],{"type":31,"value":334},"Blockchain analysis of any known wallet addresses associated with the party can often identify exchange deposit addresses in the transaction history, pointing you toward the specific exchanges that received funds. Credit card or bank records showing purchases from exchange platforms are another indicator. Interrogatories requiring the party to identify all exchange accounts, and all wallets associated with those accounts, are a standard starting point.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":336,"children":337},{},[338],{"type":26,"tag":312,"props":339,"children":340},{},[341],{"type":31,"value":342},"What if the party denies owning any cryptocurrency?",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":344,"children":345},{},[346],{"type":31,"value":347},"A denial does not end the inquiry. Bank records, credit card statements, tax records (the IRS treats cryptocurrency as property subject to capital gains tax, and some parties have filed or received 1099s), device records, social media posts, and communications may all contain evidence of cryptocurrency activity. Blockchain analysis of any addresses identified through those sources can then proceed without the party's cooperation.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":349,"children":350},{},[351],{"type":26,"tag":312,"props":352,"children":353},{},[354],{"type":31,"value":355},"Can forensic analysis still be useful if evidence was not preserved promptly?",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":357,"children":358},{},[359],{"type":31,"value":360},"Yes, often substantially. The on-chain record does not disappear. Analysis of historical blockchain data is just as reliable as analysis of recent data. The limitation on late-stage analysis is typically not the blockchain itself, but the loss of institutional records (exchange data that was not subpoenaed before the retention window closed) or device evidence that was not preserved. What survives is often enough to support a meaningful forensic analysis.",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":362,"children":363},{},[364],{"type":26,"tag":312,"props":365,"children":366},{},[367],{"type":31,"value":368},"What is the difference between a forensic report and expert testimony?",{"type":26,"tag":27,"props":370,"children":371},{},[372],{"type":31,"value":373},"A forensic report is the written documentation of the analyst's findings and methodology, typically produced as a deliverable during the investigation phase and subject to disclosure under applicable expert disclosure rules. Expert testimony is the analyst's in-person presentation of those findings, subject to examination by both parties. 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