Cryptocurrency and Digital Asset Investigation Explained
Cryptocurrency has a reputation for being untraceable, and debtors and dishonest spouses rely on that reputation when they move value into a wallet to hide it. The reputation is mostly a myth. Public blockchains record every transaction permanently and openly — the challenge is not seeing the money move, it is connecting an anonymous-looking wallet to a real, named person. A cryptocurrency and digital asset investigation does exactly that: it follows funds across the blockchain, identifies where crypto touches the regulated world at exchanges, and works to attribute holdings to an individual through lawful records and the court’s process. This page explains, honestly, what such an investigation can and cannot do, how wallets get linked to people, and where its real limits lie.
The Short Version
A cryptocurrency investigation rests on a fact most people get backward: blockchains are not anonymous, they are pseudonymous. Every transaction is recorded on a public ledger that anyone can read, so the movement of funds is fully visible; what is hidden is the link between a wallet address and a person’s name. The investigation works to close that gap. It traces funds across the chain to see where they went, identifies the points where crypto enters or exits the regulated financial system — typically exchanges, which collect identity information under know-your-customer rules — and uses transfers between traditional accounts and crypto as a bridge back to the individual. Some attribution comes from records reachable only through a subpoena or the court’s process. The honest reality is that strong cases resolve to a named person while heavily obscured ones may not fully. We trace what is traceable and attribute what is attributable, lawfully, and tell you plainly where the trail ends.
Watch: Tracing Crypto to a Person
Pseudonymous, not anonymous.
Watch Overview
Pseudonymous, Not Anonymous
The ledger is public; the name is what’s hidden.
The single most important fact about a crypto investigation is that public blockchains are not secret ledgers — they are the opposite. Every transaction on a chain like Bitcoin or Ethereum is recorded permanently and visible to anyone, showing exactly how much moved, when, and between which addresses. What the ledger does not show is who owns an address. So the money trail is fully exposed while the identity behind it is masked, which is the precise opposite of how people imagine it. A debtor who moves funds into crypto thinking it disappears has actually placed the transaction on a permanent public record; they have only hidden their name, and a name is something an investigation works to recover.
That reframing is what makes a digital asset investigation possible at all. It is a specialized branch of a broader asset search, applied to value that has moved onto the blockchain. It also overlaps directly with detecting signs a debtor is hiding assets, because a sudden, unexplained move into crypto around a judgment or divorce is itself a red flag worth following.
How a Wallet Links to a Person
The bridges between the chain and a real identity.
| Link | What It Provides | Strength | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exchange touchpoints | Where crypto meets regulated finance. Key | Exchanges collect identity (KYC). | Identity reached via subpoena. |
| Bank-to-crypto transfers | A bank funding a crypto purchase. | Bridges the chain to a named account. | Bank records via proper process. |
| Blockchain tracing | The path funds took across the chain. | Fully visible on the public ledger. | Shows movement, not identity. |
| Address clustering | Wallets likely controlled together. | Groups activity to one actor. | Analytical, needs corroboration. |
| Disclosure and discovery | The holder’s own admissions. | Compelled under oath in litigation. | Often the decisive step. |
The recurring theme is that attribution happens where crypto touches the regulated world. An exchange that collected identity under know-your-customer rules, or a bank that funded a purchase, is the bridge from a pseudonymous address to a named person — and that identity is reached lawfully through a subpoena or the court’s process, which connects this work to a bank account search and to what is ultimately collectible to satisfy a judgment.
An Honest Word About Limits
Strong cases resolve; some trails genuinely end.
It would be easy to promise that any crypto can be traced to anyone, and dishonest. The truth is more useful. The blockchain reliably shows the movement of funds, and where money passes through a compliant exchange or is funded from a bank account, attribution to a named person is often achievable through lawful process. Those are strong cases, and they resolve. But sophisticated actors use tools designed to break the trail — mixers and tumblers that pool and shuffle funds, privacy-focused coins, decentralized exchanges that collect no identity, and self-custodied wallets that never touch a regulated intermediary. Where those are used heavily, even expert tracing may not produce a confident name. A serious investigation tells you which case you are in.
That honesty is the value. The same triangulate-and-verify discipline behind professional skip tracing is applied here to follow the funds, identify every point where they touched the regulated system, and build the attribution that a subpoena or discovery can confirm. Where the trail leads to an exchange and a real identity, you get a named target; where it dissolves into a mixer, you get a clear, documented account of how far it went and why it stopped. Either way you can make an informed decision, rather than chasing a myth of total anonymity or a myth of total traceability.
Where a Crypto Investigation Helps
The situations where digital value is at stake.
Judgment Collection
A debtor who moved funds into crypto.
Divorce Assets
A spouse hiding wealth in digital coins.
Fraud Recovery
Tracing where stolen funds were sent.
Scam Investigation
Following crypto a scammer collected.
Estate Discovery
Finding a decedent’s digital holdings.
Due Diligence
Confirming a party’s digital wealth.
How We Run a Crypto Investigation
From a wallet or red flag to a documented finding.
Send What You Have
A wallet address, a transaction, or the red flags suggesting crypto, plus your lawful purpose.
We Trace the Funds
The path across the public ledger is followed, and every exchange and bank touchpoint is identified.
We Build Attribution
Touchpoints, transfers, and clustering are assembled into a basis to attribute holdings, confirmable by subpoena.
You Get the Truth
You receive a named target where the trail allows, or a documented account of how far it went and where it stopped.
Lawful Tracing, Honest Reporting
The blockchain is public; identity comes through proper process.
A cryptocurrency investigation draws on the public blockchain, open-source analysis, and licensed data, with identity-level attribution coming through lawful channels such as a subpoena to an exchange or bank, or the court’s discovery process. We operate as a skip-tracing and public-records research firm within the applicable permissible-purpose frameworks, not as licensed private investigators, and a legitimate purpose such as enforcing a judgment, dividing a marital estate, or recovering defrauded funds supports the work.
That purpose also marks the boundary. We trace funds and build attribution so you can pursue recovery or division through lawful means, never by hacking wallets, stealing keys, deceiving an exchange, or accessing accounts improperly, and we decline requests aimed at that. The deliverable is a traced fund flow and an honest attribution with a clear statement of where confidence ends. This page is general information, not legal advice; crypto law, what an exchange will disclose, and how digital assets are reached vary by jurisdiction and are evolving, and your attorney should drive the legal steps. Where crypto sits beside other concealed wealth, it connects to uncovering hidden assets in a divorce and a full asset search.
Who We Help
We trace and attribute; you pursue the value.
Judgment Creditors
Crypto-holding debtors
Divorcing Spouses
Hidden digital wealth
Fraud Victims
Tracing stolen crypto
Attorneys
Digital assets in litigation
Estates
Locating digital holdings
Businesses
Crypto due diligence
Whatever the matter, crypto is more traceable than its reputation and less magical than the hype. We trace what is traceable, attribute what is attributable, and tell you plainly where the trail ends. It pairs naturally with an asset search and, in family law, a divorce hidden-asset investigation. We do the tracing; you pursue the value — and for a workable lead, a first assessment typically comes back within 24 hours.
Our Commitment
We trace digital value as far as the chain allows and attribute it lawfully where it touches the regulated world — a named target where the trail permits, or an honest, documented account of how far it went and why it stopped. Lawful crypto and digital asset investigation since 2004 — never hacking wallets, stealing keys, or deceiving an exchange.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is cryptocurrency really traceable?
More than people think. Public blockchains record every transaction permanently and openly, so the movement of funds is fully visible. What is hidden is the link between a wallet and a person’s name. Crypto is pseudonymous, not anonymous, and an investigation works to connect that visible activity to a real identity.
How do you link a wallet to a person?
Mainly where crypto touches the regulated world. Exchanges collect identity under know-your-customer rules, and a bank that funded a crypto purchase ties the chain to a named account. Blockchain tracing and address clustering map the activity, and the identity behind it is reached lawfully through a subpoena or the court’s discovery process.
Can you always identify who owns a wallet?
No, and any honest investigator will say so. Where funds pass through a compliant exchange or a bank, attribution is often achievable. But mixers, privacy coins, decentralized exchanges, and self-custodied wallets can break the trail, and heavy use of those may prevent a confident name. We tell you which case you are in.
What is a mixer, and why does it matter?
A mixer or tumbler pools many users’ funds and shuffles them to obscure the link between source and destination. It is one of the main tools used to break a trail. When funds pass through a mixer, tracing becomes much harder and sometimes inconclusive, which is a limit a serious investigation will report rather than paper over.
Can crypto be collected to satisfy a judgment?
It can be, depending on the facts and jurisdiction. Once holdings are attributed to a person and located at an exchange, they may be reachable through the same enforcement and court processes used for other assets, including discovery and orders directed at the exchange. How crypto is reached is an evolving legal question for your attorney.
Is a crypto investigation legal?
Yes, when it relies on the public blockchain, open-source analysis, and licensed data, with identity reached through lawful process like a subpoena, for a legitimate purpose. It is illegal to hack wallets, steal keys, or deceive an exchange for information, which we never do and decline to attempt.
What do you need to start?
A wallet address, a transaction hash, or even the red flags suggesting someone moved value into crypto, along with your lawful purpose. From any concrete starting point, the public ledger can be followed; from a red flag, the bank-to-crypto bridge is often where the trail begins.
How long does a crypto investigation take?
For a workable lead such as a wallet or transaction, a first assessment of how traceable the funds are typically comes back within 24 hours. Full attribution that depends on a subpoena to an exchange takes longer and involves your attorney, and you receive an honest account either way of where the trail leads and where it ends.
Crypto Isn’t as Anonymous as They Think
Send a wallet, a transaction, or the red flags you’ve seen, with your lawful purpose, and we’ll trace what’s traceable and attribute what’s attributable — with an honest read on where the trail ends, typically a first assessment within 24 hours. Contact us to get started.
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