160 National Security Veterans Back CLARITY Act as Senate Crypto Battle Reaches Critical Stage
Key Takeaways
- Former officials urged Senate leaders to support the CLARITY Act’s crypto market rules.
- Notably, 160 national security, intelligence, and law enforcement veterans signed the letter.
- Senators now face mounting pressure to decide the bill’s future path.
Crypto Rules Debate Intensifies as Senate Faces CLARITY Act Pressure
Pressure is rising in Washington over the CLARITY Act, as the Blockchain Association says 160 former national security, intelligence, and law enforcement professionals are backing the crypto market structure bill.
In a June 2 letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), the signatories frame digital asset oversight as a national security issue.
Blockchain Association wrote on X:
“Today, we’re sending a letter to Senate Majority Leader Thune and Senate Democratic Leader Schumer signed by 160 former national security, intelligence, and law enforcement professionals in support of the CLARITY Act.”
The letter argues that digital asset activity should operate under U.S. rules, oversight, and law enforcement reach. It says offshore migration could push markets into opaque venues beyond U.S. investigators.
Officials say the CLARITY Act would expand the Bank Secrecy Act and sanctions obligations for digital commodity brokers, dealers, and exchanges. It also would create Treasury-led information sharing with the Department of Justice (DOJ), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and private companies.
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025, known as the CLARITY Act, passed the House in July 2025 in a 294-134 vote. The Senate Banking Committee advanced the market structure bill on May 14 in a bipartisan 15-9 vote. It still needs full Senate approval, possible House-Senate reconciliation, and President Donald Trump’s signature before becoming law.
Crypto Crime, Market Rules, and Global Competition Now Converge
The letter points to several enforcement changes beyond traditional exchanges. It says the bill would add anti-fraud safeguards, monitoring rules, reporting duties, transaction limits, and law enforcement contacts for digital asset kiosks. It also would extend compliance duties to certain centralized finance trading protocols and clarify sanctions expectations for distributed ledger messaging systems.
For prosecutors and investigators, the most consequential provisions may involve suspicious transactions and asset recovery. The letter says the bill would allow temporary holds on suspicious digital asset transfers, require law enforcement notification, and reinforce court-order compliance. It also would define digital assets as monetary instruments and expand administrative seizure authorities in significant cases.
Blockchain Association further wrote:
“The responsible digital asset industry stands with law enforcement. We support strong compliance, strong consumer protections, and strong tools to combat illicit finance. That’s why the Senate should advance the CLARITY Act.”
The wider push now blends market structure, enforcement, consumer protection, and global competition. President Donald Trump has called for a lasting digital asset framework that “cannot be undone,” while U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) warned that delay could push major crypto legislation to 2030. A16z Crypto has argued that the United States is falling behind Europe’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) and the U.K.’s rulemaking push. Stand With Crypto, a crypto advocacy group backed by digital asset supporters, has urged the full Senate to pass the bill.


