Arkham has published a public map of wallets it says are linked to Iran’s central bank, following U.S. sanctions against Tron addresses and the freezing of about $344 million in USDT.
The story sits at the intersection of blockchain analytics, sanctions enforcement and stablecoin centralization. It also shows how public ledgers can become investigative infrastructure when governments, analytics firms and stablecoin issuers focus on the same wallets.
Arkham’s May 11 research grouped wallets into a Central Bank of Iran entity page and explorer, making the addresses easier to track publicly.
The map is based on two TRC-20 wallets that the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control added to its Specially Designated Nationals list on April 24, 2026. OFAC identified the wallets as property of Bank Markazi Jomhouri Islami Iran.
That designation turned what might have been a specialist blockchain tracing issue into a public sanctions story.
U.S. authorities said about $344 million in crypto linked to Iran was frozen as part of the action. Tether separately said it froze funds at the request of U.S. authorities over activity tied to unlawful conduct, without explicitly naming Iran in its public statement.
The freeze highlights a key feature of centralized stablecoins: issuers can blacklist addresses and prevent tokens from moving.
For law enforcement, that is a powerful tool. For crypto users, it is also a reminder that stablecoins such as USDT are not censorship-resistant in the same way as native assets like Bitcoin.
The wallets in this case are TRC-20 addresses on Tron. That matters because Tron has become one of the most important networks for USDT movement due to low fees, fast settlement and large stablecoin liquidity.
Those same features make Tron useful for legitimate payments and for illicit flows. As a result, Tron-based stablecoin activity has drawn increasing attention from analytics firms, regulators and law enforcement agencies.
Cointelegraph also noted that Tether froze more than $500 million in USDT across Ethereum and Tron during a recent 30-day period, with most of that amount on Tron.
Arkham’s wallet map shows how blockchain analytics firms are changing crypto enforcement. Instead of private investigative reports staying behind closed doors, labeled entities and wallet clusters can now become public reference points.
That creates a new kind of pressure. Once wallets are mapped, counterparties, exchanges, brokers and DeFi protocols can more easily screen flows and avoid exposure.
But it also raises concerns. Incorrect attribution, incomplete clustering or political misuse of analytics labels could create serious consequences for users and institutions.
For everyday users, the lesson is not that USDT is unsafe by default. The lesson is that centralized stablecoins include issuer-level controls.
If an address is sanctioned, linked to illicit activity or flagged by law enforcement, stablecoin funds can be frozen. Users and businesses that handle stablecoins need compliance processes, wallet screening and a clear understanding of counterparty risk.
This is especially important for exchanges, payment processors, OTC desks and DeFi protocols that interact with large stablecoin flows.
Arkham published a public wallet map that it says links Tron addresses to Iran’s central bank.
U.S. authorities said about $344 million in crypto linked to Iran was frozen as part of the sanctions action.
USDT is issued by a centralized company, and Tether can blacklist addresses at the token contract level.
Tron is widely used for USDT transfers because of low fees and fast settlement, making it a major network for stablecoin flows.

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