JPMorgan Chase is once again under scrutiny from the crypto community after reportedly closing a business account belonging to a ShapeShift employee and warning that the individual’s personal account could be shut down next. While the employee’s identity has not been widely disclosed, the move echoes a high-profile case involving Strike CEO Jack Mallers, reigniting industry-wide concerns about the growing trend of “debanking.”
A Pattern of Tension Between Banks and Crypto Firms
The closure is part of a broader friction that has been building for years between traditional financial institutions and companies tied to digital assets. Banks often cite compliance concerns, especially around the Bank Secrecy Act, anti–money laundering rules, and risk scoring frameworks, as justification for abruptly freezing or terminating accounts. However, due to strict confidentiality requirements, especially around Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs), banks are legally barred from explaining the specific reasons to customers.
The Strike Precedent
The latest incident follows the widely publicized case of Jack Mallers, the CEO of Bitcoin payments firm Strike and co-founder of Twenty One Capital. In September 2025, Mallers revealed that JPMorgan Chase had closed his personal accounts, citing only “concerning activity.” No further explanation was given, triggering debate inside and outside the crypto sector about whether major banks are applying undue pressure on digital-asset companies and their founders.
Industry Pushback and Calls for Boycotts
Crypto advocates have strongly criticized JPMorgan’s recent actions, with some prominent voices urging users to boycott the bank. They argue that shutting down accounts without transparency, especially for individuals legally operating in the digital-asset industry, undermines federal efforts to improve regulatory clarity and institutional collaboration.
A Widening Divide Despite Federal Progress
The timing is notable: the federal government has recently emphasized a more collaborative, innovation-focused approach to digital asset regulation. Yet, on the ground, crypto-linked businesses and employees continue facing abrupt account closures from major banks.
The growing list of incidents involving JPMorgan and crypto-affiliated individuals highlights an unresolved tension between traditional banking risk frameworks and the rapidly evolving digital asset sector, one that may require clearer regulatory guardrails before meaningful trust can be rebuilt.


