
Kidnappers target crypto entrepreneurs for ransom in France
French police rescued the father of a wealthy cryptocurrency entrepreneur in a nighttime raid after he was taken hostage for ransom, the latest alleged criminal effort in France to extort people involved in the management of digital assets.
The man was kidnapped Thursday morning in Paris (local time), the prosecutor's office said.
'The victim turned out to be the father of a man who made his fortune in cryptocurrencies, and the incident was accompanied by a ransom demand,' its statement said, without giving their names or other specifics about their identities.
Police investigators located the hostage in a house in the Essonne region south of Paris, from which he was rescued on Saturday night (local time), the prosecutor's office said.
It said he was treated for injuries but gave no details. French media reported that the alleged hostage-takers cut off one of the man's fingers.
Police detained five people — four were in or close to the house where the man was held captive, while the fifth was at the wheel of a vehicle thought to have been used for the alleged abduction, the prosecutor's office said.
It said the police investigation is looking at an array of possible criminal charges, including kidnapping 'with torture or a barbaric act.'
In January, police said a co-founder of French crypto-wallet firm Ledger, David Balland, was also kidnapped with his wife from their home in the region of Cher of central France.
Police said they made 10 arrests and that the alleged kidnappers demanded a ransom in cryptocurrency from another of Ledger's co-founders.
A raid by France's elite National Gendarmerie Intervention Group unit that specialises in hostage situations freed Balland the next day, followed the day after that by the liberation, again by the GIGN, of his wife, found tied up in a vehicle, police said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
4 days ago
- NZ Herald
Watch: French President Emmanuel Macron appears to be shoved in face by wife
Emmanuel Macron has been filmed being shoved in the face by his wife Brigitte after the couple had landed in Vietnam. The footage, shot by the Associated Press news agency in Hanoi on Sunday evening, showed the French President standing alone as the plane's door opened. Suddenly, the arms of

1News
6 days ago
- 1News
Paris court finds eight guilty in the 2016 robbery of Kim Kardashian
A Paris court found the ringleader and seven other people guilty in the 2016 armed robbery of Kim Kardashian, but did not impose any additional time behind bars for their roles in what the US celebrity described as "the most terrifying experience of my life". The chief judge, David De Pas, said that the defendants' ages — six are in their 60s and 70s — and their health issues weighed on the court's decision to impose sentences that he said, "aren't very severe". He said that the nine years between the robbery and the trial — long even by the standards of France's famously deliberate legal system — were also taken into account in not imposing harsher sentences. The court acquitted two of the 10 defendants. Aomar Aït Khedache, 69, the ringleader, got the stiffest sentence, eight years imprisonment but five of those are suspended. Three others got seven years, five of them suspended. Three more got prison sentences ranging from five to three years, mostly or completely suspended, and an eighth person was found guilty on a weapons charge and fined. With time already served in pretrial detention, none of those found guilty will go to prison. The trial was heard by a three-judge panel and six jurors. Still, the chief judge said that Kardashian had been traumatised by the October 2, 2016, jewel heist in her hotel during Fashion Week. "You caused harm,' he said. "You caused fear." Kardashian, who wasn't present for the verdict, issued a statement after the ruling was announced that she was "deeply grateful to the French authorities for pursuing justice in this case". "The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family. While I'll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all. I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system," said the celebrity who is working to become a lawyer. A separate statement from her legal team said that "Kim appreciates the court's decision." "It has been a long journey from that terrible night," it said. "She looks forward to putting this tragic episode behind her." Khedache arrived at court walking with a stick, his face hidden from cameras. His DNA, found on the bands used to bind Kardashian, was a key breakthrough that helped crack open the case. Wiretaps captured him giving orders, recruiting accomplices and arranging to sell the diamonds in Belgium. A diamond-encrusted cross, dropped during the escape, was the only piece of jewelry ever recovered. The men made off with more than US$6 million (NZ$10 million) in jewelry, including a diamond ring she'd worn that night to a Givenchy show. They also took a watch her late father had given her when she graduated high school. Two of the robbers, dressed as police, forced their way into her suite in the glamorous Hôtel de Pourtalès and bound Kardashian with zip ties and tape. The theft subsequently forced celebrities to rethink how they live and protect themselves. Because of their ages, the accused became known in France as "les papys braqueurs," or the grandpa robbers. They faced charges including armed robbery, kidnapping and gang association. Kardashian's testimony earlier this month was the emotional high point. In a packed courtroom, she recounted how she was thrown onto a bed, zip-tied, and had a gun pressed to her on the night of October 2, 2016. "I absolutely did think I was going to die," she said. "I have babies. I have to make it home. They can take everything. I just have to make it home." She was dragged into a marble bathroom and told to stay silent. When the robbers fled, she freed herself by scraping the tape on her wrists off against the sink, then hid with her friend, shaking and barefoot. She said that Paris had once been her sanctuary — a city she would wander at 3am, window shopping, stopping for hot chocolate. That illusion was shattered. Khedache says he was only a foot soldier. He blamed a mysterious "X" or "Ben" — someone prosecutors say never existed. His lawyer pleaded for clemency, pointing to one of the trial's most visceral moments — Kardashian's earlier courtroom encounter with the man accused of orchestrating her ordeal. Though she wasn't present, her words — and the memory of that moment — still echoed. "She looked at him when she came, she listened to the letter he had written to her, and then she forgave him," lawyer Franck Berton told The Associated Press. Kardashian, typically shielded by security and spectacle, had locked eyes with Khedache as the letter was read aloud. "I do appreciate the letter, I forgive you," she said. "But it doesn't change the feelings and the trauma and the fact that my life was forever changed." A tabloid crime had become something raw and human. Khedache asked for "a thousand pardons," communicated via a written note in court. Other defendants also used their final words to express remorse. The robbery echoed far beyond the City of Light. It forced a recalibration of celebrity behavior in the age of Instagram. For years, Kardashian had curated her life like a showroom: geo-tagged, diamond-lit, public by design. But this was the moment the showroom turned into a crime scene. In her words, 'People were watching … They knew where I was.' Afterward, she stopped posting her location in real time. She stripped her social media feed of lavish gifts and vanished from Paris for years. Other stars followed suit.


NZ Herald
7 days ago
- NZ Herald
Kim Kardashian expresses gratitude as robbers convicted in Paris heist
Kardashian, then 35, was robbed while staying at an exclusive hotel in the French capital on the night of October 2-3, 2016. She was threatened with a gun to the head and tied up, with her mouth taped. Kardashian said after the verdict she was 'deeply grateful to the French authorities for pursuing justice'. 'The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family,' she said in a statement sent by her lawyers. 'While I'll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all,' she added. After the hearing adjourned, the convicted men embraced their loved ones in relief and slowly left the courtroom, taking with them the bags and suitcases they had prepared in case of imprisonment. 'The sentences are quite lenient; I understand that you understand that you have caused harm,' presiding Judge David De Pas told them as he read out the verdicts. He also said 'the state of health of the main protagonists ethically prohibits incarcerating anyone. It would have been unjust to take you to prison this evening'. Aomar Ait Khedache had begged to be forgiven in his final statement before sentencing. Khedache is now virtually mute and completely deaf, and his statement was read out by his lawyer. 'I ask for forgiveness. I can't find the words. I am very sorry,' he wrote, asking for 'a thousand pardons' from his son Harminy, who was convicted for acting as a driver on the night of the heist. Two other men convicted of carrying out the robbery on the night, Yunice Abbas, 71, and Didier Dubreucq, 69, were sentenced to seven years' jail including five suspended. Dubreucq was absent as he is undergoing chemotherapy treatment for cancer. The fourth member of the robbery gang, Marc-Alexandre Boyer, 35, was given the same sentence. Kardashian's lawyers said in a statement that the star 'looks forward to putting this tragic episode behind her, as she continues working to improve the criminal justice system on behalf of victims, the innocent, and the incarcerated seeking to redeem themselves'. Most of the stolen valuables were never recovered, including a diamond ring given to Kardashian by her then-husband, rapper Kanye West. The ring alone was valued at €3.5 million ($3.9 million). The robbery was the biggest against a private individual in France in 20 years. Most of the accused are now in their 60s and 70s and have been dubbed the 'Grandpa robbers' by French media. But making the sentencing demands earlier this week, the prosecutor urged the judges and jury to remember that Kardashian was targeted by a violent attack and not to be taken in by the 'wrinkles' of the defendants. The American star testified at the trial, wearing a diamond necklace valued at $3 million, according to its New York-based creator Samer Halimeh. During the trial, Kardashian told the court she forgave Khedache after hearing a letter of apology from him. 'I forgive you for what has taken place but it does not change the emotion, the feelings, the trauma and the way my life changed,' she told Khedache, adding that she believed in a 'second chance'. Kardashian, sometimes described as 'famous for being famous', became well known in the early 2000s through TV reality shows, before launching fashion brands and appearing in films.