The tech corridors of Frisco and Plano are home to some of the most sophisticated technology executives in Texas. Unfortunately, this technical literacy is often weaponized during divorce proceedings.
While most attorneys are catching up to Bitcoin, these High-Net-Worth individuals have already moved on to something much harder to trace: Privacy Coins.
What is Monero (XMR)?
Unlike Bitcoin, where every transaction is public, Monero (XMR) uses advanced cryptography (Ring Signatures) to hide the sender, receiver, and amount. It is the preferred tool for executives looking to make millions "disappear" from the marital balance sheet.
How We Catch It
If a spouse moves $500,000 into Monero, they think the trail ends. They are wrong. While we cannot see inside the Monero blockchain easily, we can spot the Entry and Exit Points.
We look for:
- The Swap: Transactions on bank statements to niche exchanges like "Kraken" or "FixedFloat" that specialize in privacy coins.
- The "Dead End": Bitcoin leaving a known wallet and entering a "Swap Service" address.
- Device Artifacts: The Monero wallet software (GUI Wallet) leaves distinct traces on a laptop hard drive, even if deleted.
"They can hide the transaction, but they can't hide the purchase. We trace the missing dollars to the point where they vanished, and shift the burden of proof to the spouse to explain where that money went."
Why Local Context Matters
In Frisco and Plano, compensation packages often include RSUs (Restricted Stock Units) and crypto-bonuses. We often see these assets liquidated and moved into Privacy Coins immediately upon vesting to avoid community property claims.
Don't let a "tech-savvy" spouse outsmart the discovery process. We speak their language.