Europol has warned that blockchain and AI will “accelerate serious and organised crime” in the coming years, with a new report from the EU law enforcement agency even predicting that fully autonomous AI “could pave the way for entirely AI-controlled criminal networks.”
In its 2025 Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment, Europol suggested that the combination of AI and crypto will serve to expand online fraud schemes, which already represent “the most rapidly expanding sector” in organised crime.
🚨New Report! #SOCTA25: The changing DNA of serious and organised crime.
⚠️This is one of the most thorough analyses on the threats of serious and organised crime, designed to assist decision-makers in the prioritisation of threats in Europe.
Read: https://t.co/Riuuswlfvi
— Europol (@Europol) March 18, 2025
“Narratives are extremely realistic, crafted with the help of AI, and incorporating trending societal topics,” the report’s authors wrote. “Cryptocurrency features prominently as a payment method.”
Crypto and crime
While not data-focused, the assessment offers a broad and far-reaching summary of the expanding role cryptocurrencies are now playing in serious crime in Europe.
The report concluded that cryptocurrency has “moved beyond the scope of cybercrime” and is found increasingly in more “traditional” areas such as “drug trafficking or migrant smuggling.”
Other varieties of crime which crypto facilitates include cyberattacks, online fraud, sanctions evasion, and also the trafficking of human beings.
Written by senior researchers in the fields of crime and security, the starkest warning comes with respect to how the emergence of AI may effectively help automate such criminal activity on an industrial scale.
The report’s authors state that AI’s automation capabilities are already making criminal operations more efficient and expansive.
“From automating phishing campaigns to executing large-scale cyber-attacks, AI enables criminals to achieve more – reach more victims, be more targeted in their approach, and expand their global reach – with fewer resources,” the report read.
Among the cybercriminal uses of AI, the assessment lists “attack automation, social engineering, and bypassing security measures,” which again are making cyberattacks more scalable.
Europol’s evaluation of finds support in private research, with blockchain intelligence platform TRM Labs releasing a report in January of this year which revealed that bad actors “are increasingly leveraging AI to carry out hacks and conduct fraud.”
How criminals are using AI
Isabella Chase, the Head of Policy for EMEA at TRM Labs, told Decrypt that there are three primary ways in which criminals are already using AI.
The first relates to the automation of attacks, with AI-based tools enabling “the automation of phishing campaigns, creating highly convincing messages at scale,” according to Chase.
Related to this is how criminals are using AI to create deepfakes and other synthetic media.
“Criminals use AI to build convincing deepfakes or to embellish existing stolen identities to dupe victims,” she said. “This is increasingly important for business compromise, which is the most profitable form of online fraud.”
Less visibly, AI is also being used to support cybercrime and other exploits by providing criminals with additional information, providing data and details they may have otherwise missed.
As Chase explains, “AI algorithms optimize ransomware operations by identifying the most critical data or systems to encrypt for maximum leverage […] AI also allows malware to adapt dynamically to evade real-time detection.”
The use of AI is likely already adding millions on to the cost of organised crime, but TRM Labs estimates that more criminals will adopt AI “in the coming years” as they experiment with different ways of harnessing it for their particular ends.
“Criminals will use AI for targeting and engaging with victims whether these be individuals or entities,” Chase told Decrypt, adding that the technology will also be used for “more programmatic laundering of criminal funds which could make it easier to profit from crime.”
While this may paint a bleak picture, Chase ultimately suggested that there will be a parallel growth in law enforcement and the private sector using AI and more advanced analytic tools, thereby improving “their ability to identify criminals and their activities.”
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