In the public record, 2025 looks like a collapse in US whistleblower award messaging: the US SEC’s own newsroom tag shows 7 award-related items in 2023, 5 in 2024, and just 1 in 2025; the CFTC’s whistleblower news feed shows only one 2025 award post. It is a systematic dismantling of the most effective financial crime detection mechanism occurring precisely when the financial system has become exponentially more complex, opaque, and vulnerable to abuse.
The Trump administration has quietly done what no Wall Street lobby ever fully achieved: it has gutted the most effective anti-fraud weapon in U.S. securities regulation at the exact moment financial crime has gone fully digital.
Under Gary Gensler, the SEC Whistleblower Program was a monster success: $255 million paid to 47 whistleblowers in FY 2024, the third‑highest annual total ever, contributing to more than $2.2 billion in total awards since 2011. In FY 2025, under Trump and new SEC Chair Paul Atkins, awards collapsed to just $59.7 million—a 77% plunge and the lowest level in years.
So why the chill? Three plausible drivers show up in the 2025 context:
The CFTC mirrors the pattern. After a record 12 awards totaling $42 million in FY 2024, it issued only two awards in FY 2025—$700,000 in May and $1.8 million in December. Both agencies are sitting on massive pipelines of tips in markets riddled with crypto and derivatives abuse, and choosing not to pay.
This is not an accident of budget. It is policy.
Paul Atkins has opposed the SEC whistleblower concept from the beginning. In 2011 Senate testimony, he attacked the Dodd‑Frank program as creating “perverse incentives” and claimed it would encourage employees to bypass internal compliance. The data later proved him wrong—but now the program is in his hands.
It gets worse. Atkins is not just philosophically hostile to whistleblowers; he is financially entangled with the very sector most dependent on them:
Under Trump and Atkins, the SEC has dropped or paused nearly 60% of crypto cases, sharply reduced actions against public companies, and brought no new crypto enforcement cases after the administration change. At the same time, whistleblower awards—the primary way insiders are incentivized to expose crypto and DeFi fraud—have been suffocated.
This is not a regulator “rebalancing priorities.” This is regulatory capture in broad daylight.
The timing could not be more dangerous. Financial crime has moved from branch offices and boiler rooms to blockchains, APIs, and high‑velocity payment rails.
Traditional AML systems were never built for this world. DeFi protocols, privacy mixers, synthetic identities, nested correspondent banking chains, and white‑label payment cascades cannot be fully decoded from outside. You need insiders: devs, compliance officers, risk managers, PSP staff, and operations people who can explain which wallets belong to whom, how the layering works, and where the beneficial owners are hiding.
Academic work is crystal clear: the SEC Whistleblower Program significantly reduced financial reporting fraud and deterred insider trading once implemented, especially at firms with weak internal controls. SEC officials themselves admit that insider tips and expert analysis are “critical” to detecting complex schemes and that the program only works if whistleblowers can share information freely and expect to be paid when they are right.
In crypto and DeFi, specialists emphasize that exposing fraud is “extremely difficult” without insiders, as schemes are crafted to exploit the very opacity and cross‑chain complexity of the ecosystem. It is “now more important than ever” for crypto whistleblowers to come forward.
Trump’s SEC has effectively told them: don’t bother.
Cyberfinance misconduct is rail-based and multi-layered: open-banking “pay-by-bank” flows, nested PSPs, stablecoin bridges, OTC brokers, DeFi perps, affiliate-driven offshore casinos—systems designed to fragment accountability. Regulators cannot “audit the internet” from their offices. They need human sensors inside the stack: compliance staff, payment ops, risk analysts, growth teams, KYC vendors, chain surveillance contractors. The SEC’s own FY2024 data shows crypto/ICO-related allegations are already a meaningful share of tips—this is not a niche problem.
If 2025 becomes the year regulators stop visibly rewarding insiders, the message to the market is brutal: “Stay quiet.” And the winners are exactly the actors who thrive in opacity.


