The freeze landed quietly, then loudly. $213 million in USDT, spread across 48 separate wallets tied to Gurhan Kiziloz, locked in place by Tether Operations Ltd. at the request of Brazilian authorities. It is one of the largest single-target stablecoin freezes on record, and one of the most pointed.
The action stems from an alleged gambling tax dispute covering operations between 2021 and 2024, alongside allegations of unregistered token sales during the same window. Both strands rest on regulatory frameworks Brazil did not finalise until 2024, raising the question of whether the country can enforce its new rules against conduct that pre-dated them.
No criminal charges have been filed. The case is being pursued through civil channels. Kiziloz did not respond to requests for comment.
Freezing 48 separate wallets in connection with the Brazilian gambling tax dispute is not a routine compliance action. Tax investigators had to identify, map, and verify each account individually, tying every wallet back to the disputed tax period before Tether could act, a process that demands granular on-chain analysis and tight cross-border cooperation between Brazilian tax authorities and the stablecoin issuer.
The scale of the operation signals that Brazilian authorities have been building the tax case for some time, and that Tether’s compliance machinery is now sophisticated enough to execute on retrospective fiscal claims at this depth.
Tether has now frozen more than $5.1 billion in USDT since inception, according to on-chain analysis, including over $500 million in the past 30 days alone. With circulating supply approaching $190 billion and USDT functioning as the primary liquidity instrument across the cryptocurrency market, the firm’s freeze button has become one of the most consequential enforcement tools in digital finance. When Tether acts, liquidity disappears in minutes, not after weeks of court motions and bank wire reversals.
It also signals how far the stablecoin issuer has travelled from its early reputation. What was once marketed as borderless and censorship-resistant infrastructure is, in practice, a centralised compliance layer that governments can activate at will, including in service of tax claims that pre-date the rules under which they are being made.
Kiziloz’s legal team is expected to contest both strands of the action on constitutional grounds. Brazilian law contains explicit protections against the retrospective imposition of fiscal obligations, and legal commentators have noted that retroactive enforcement generally faces a high evidentiary bar.
The civil courts will decide. Other operators and issuers active in Brazil during the same window will be watching closely.
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