DOJ ·

Alibaba and Ant's AUS Merchant Services pay $600M in DOJ non-prosecution deal over illegal-pharma marketplace and AML failures

Online marketplaces and payment processors serving US buyers must build screening and AML transaction-monitoring that actually prevents prohibited-goods sales and settlement, not just flag them after the fact

Change
On 1 July 2026 the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced non-prosecution agreements under which Alibaba Group and AUS Merchant Services Inc. (formerly Alipay US, an Ant Group subsidiary) will pay a combined $600 million to resolve allegations that they violated the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act by failing to prevent merchants selling and importing illegal pharmaceuticals, controlled substances, listed chemicals and pill presses into the US via Alibaba.com and AliExpress.com, and that AUS's AML transaction-monitoring failed to incorporate wire-transfer data and to restrict flagged merchants.
Why it matters
Alibaba admitted failing to prevent about 80,000 prohibited US-import sales (over $200 million GMV) between 2016 and 2024, including via a platform messaging service used to facilitate unlawful transactions. AUS admitted its transaction-monitoring omitted certain wire-transfer data — missing high-risk-jurisdiction payments and multiple-payor invoices — and that it reported flagged merchants to Alibaba rather than systematically restricting them, with at least one continuing to sell after being reported. Alibaba pays a $125 million penalty and $200 million forfeiture; AUS pays $85 million and $190 million. Both must enhance compliance programs and continue cooperating; the DOJ's stated basis emphasises that marketplaces and payment platforms — US-based or foreign — must implement safeguards that prevent bad actors before goods reach the US and its banking system.
Implications
  • Applies to any online marketplace serving US buyers: trust-and-safety and compliance teams must implement prohibited-goods screening that systematically restricts flagged merchants rather than merely reporting or monitoring them — the DOJ treated reporting a flagged merchant while letting it keep selling as a compliance failure, and platform fee revenue tied to illicit sellers as an aggravating fact.
  • Applies to payment processors and money services businesses settling US-dollar transactions: AML teams must ensure transaction-monitoring ingests complete wire-transfer data so that high-risk-jurisdiction payments and multiple-payor-single-invoice patterns are actually detected — AUS's omission of wire data from its monitoring was a specific, named control gap that produced liability.
  • Marketplaces that operate in-platform messaging must treat that channel as a monitored surface: the DOJ cited merchants using the platform's private messaging to arrange unlawful sales and to move buyers to encrypted third-party apps as part of the failure — unmonitored communication channels are part of the control exposure.
  • Alibaba Group and AUS Merchant Services are bound by the non-prosecution agreements to pay the $600 million, enhance their compliance programs, and cooperate with future investigations — breach of the NPA terms exposes them to the deferred prosecution.
Who is affected
  • Trust-and-safety and compliance teams at online marketplaces serving US buyers
  • AML teams at payment processors and money services businesses settling US-dollar transactions
  • Marketplaces operating in-platform buyer-seller messaging
  • Alibaba Group and AUS Merchant Services Inc.
View on DOJ
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