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Father of crypto-millionaire rescued after being held for ransom—and having his finger severed

Father of crypto-millionaire rescued after being held for ransom—and having his finger severed

Yahoo05-05-2025

The father of a crypto entrepreneur was rescued by French police on Saturday after being kidnapped late last week, according to Paris prosecutors, marking the latest in a string of high-profile crypto-related attacks in recent years.
The unnamed victim was abducted from a street in Paris and held for ransom at a home in Essonne, 35 miles away, the French authorities said in a statement. The kidnappers sent a video of the mutilated victim to his son—who had made his fortune in crypto—demanding millions of euros in ransom, according to CNN. The victim was freed after two days by French police but not before having one of his fingers severed by his assailants, CNN reported.
French police arrested seven people in relation to the abduction, according to the prosecutor's statement. The perpetrators were not identified, but are between the ages of 18 and 30.
This kidnapping follows a similar violent incident in which the cofounder of crypto company Ledger, David Balland, and his wife were abducted in January from central France and held for ransom. After the couple was separated and detained in different locations, the assailants contacted another one of the company's co-founders to demand a ransom in cryptocurrency. The couple was eventually rescued by police, but Balland suffered mutilation to his hand.
Then, in November, the CEO of Canada's largest crypto company WonderFi, Dean Skurka, was kidnapped on the streets of Toronto and held for ransom. After being forced to pay $1 million in Canadian dollars, Skurka was dropped off in a park near Toronto, uninjured.
In recent years, crypto executives and their families have increasingly become targets for these attacks, also known as wrench attacks. Jameson Lopp, a famous early Bitcoiner, has kept track of the growing trend since he was extorted in 2017 by logging publicized crypto-related incidents in a list on GitHub. According to his tally, there were 24 attacks in 2023, 31 attacks in 2024, n and 21 crypto-related attacks in the first five months of this year.
The growing threat of violence against crypto executives and Bitcoin holders has spurred AnchorWatch, a Bitcoin insurance company, to offer a policy that insures a holder's crypto in the event of a wrench attack. While the policy will allow holders to recoup up to $100 million of their stolen crypto, it won't protect holders from being kidnapped or attacked.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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David Sweat reflects on 'Escape at Dannemora' 10 years later
David Sweat reflects on 'Escape at Dannemora' 10 years later

New York Post

time44 minutes ago

  • New York Post

David Sweat reflects on 'Escape at Dannemora' 10 years later

A decade after he broke out of Clinton state prison in the infamous 'Escape at Dannemora' and led cops on a 23-day manhunt that riveted the nation, convicted killer David Sweat, in an exclusive jailhouse interview with The Post, confessed to his one regret. He should have picked a better partner in crime. 'If I hadn't done it with him, I'd probably still be out,' Sweat, 44, said of fellow escapee Richard Matt. Advertisement 8 David Sweat shared his one big regret with The Post during a visit at Mid-State Correctional Facility — nearly 10 years to the day after his infamous escape from Dannemora. AP With his wrists cuffed and a thick chain wrapped around his waist, the clean-shaven, bespectacled Sweat spoke publicly for the first time in eight years during a tearful, hour-long interview at the Mid-State Correctional Facility in upstate Marcy. The Post reporter, there for the 10th anniversary of the infamous June 6, 2015 escape, was his first visitor in three years, Sweat claimed. Advertisement 'If I'd known everything about him before, I probably would've done it alone,' Sweat said of the 49-year-old Matt. Sweat said he now believes Matt was as a confidential informant for the police back in the 1990s. Matt's 25-year to life sentence began in July 2008 after he was convicted of kidnapping, torturing and murdering 76-year-old William Rickerson, his former employer, in Niagara County in December 1997. 8 Sweat was recaptured on June 28, 2015, when he was shot twice in the back by a state trooper just south of the Canadian border. AP 'You can't trust someone like that . . . and that's worse than the drinking,' Sweat said. Advertisement He was referring to Matt's heavy boozing after the duo found bottles of liquor at an uninhabited cabin following their escape. 'I try not to live with regrets and look back, because it is what it is at this point,' Sweat continued in a soft voice. 'On the one hand, I'm glad that it helped some guys get better treatment and changed things in [Clinton Correctional Facility], because there was some bad crap going on. 'On the other hand, you know, I'm in here for the rest of my life.' Advertisement He added, 'I just wanted to be free.' Sweat now spends his days in an 18-by-5-foot cell. 8 Sweat and Richard Matt escaped from Clinton Correctional Facility on June 6, 2015 with the help of the prison's seamstress, Joyce Mitchell (pictured). LP Media He claims he has been in solitary confinement for 10 years, shuttled between nine different prisons. Sweat and Matt became close while serving time in adjoining cells at Clinton, where Sweat was serving a life sentence without parole for the 2002 killing of a Broome County sheriff's deputy. They hatched their elaborate bid for freedom with the aid of a prison seamstress — the 'Shawskank,' Joyce Mitchell — who was accused of having sexual relationships with both fugitives. Mitchell has repeatedly claimed she and Sweat were never intimate — though she admitted to investigators she had oral sex with Matt and gave nude photos of herself to Matt to give to Sweat. Using tools smuggled in by a correction officer that Mitchell concealed in frozen hamburger meat, they cut through their cell's steel walls over the span of months. The night of the escape, they crawled nearly 500 feet through a pipe before coming to the surface at a manhole cover outside the prison walls. But Mitchell never met them with a getaway car as planned. Advertisement 8 Sweat slammed Ben Stiller's hit 2018 Netflix series 'Escape at Dannemora' — in which he is played by actor Paul Dano (left) and Matt is portrayed by Benicio del Toro (right) — as a 'Hollywood production.' /SHOWTIME The fugitives made a desperate dash toward to the Candian borden, hiking through dense woods and swamps, and squatting in abandoned cabins, as 1,500 cops hunted them. They eventually split up because Sweat could no longer tolerate Matt's drinking and slow pace. Matt was killed in a standoff with cops on the 20th day of the manhunt. Sweat was captured two days later, after he was shot twice by a state trooper just south of the border. Advertisement Ben Stiller's hit 2018 series 'Escape at Dannemora,' in which Sweat is played by actor Paul Dano and Matt is portrayed by Benicio del Toro, reignited the public's fascination in the caper. Although he hasn't seen it, Sweat is not impressed. 'I don't like it because a lot of things . . . were untrue. Like, the stuff between me and Mitchell. We weren't involved like that at all,' he insisted. 8 Using tools smuggled in by Mitchell, the convicted killers cut and climbed into an 18-inch steam pipe in the facility's underbelly, then crawled nearly 500 feet before coming to the surface through a manhole cover. Getty Images Advertisement He also refuted a scene in which corrections officer Gene Palmer — played by actor David Morse — slams his head into a toilet. 'That never happened,' Sweat said. 'I never really interacted with Palmer. That was Matt's guy.' Sweat does not believe he can escape again. 'They'll never let me go to general population,' he said. 'They think I'd try to do it again or I'd help someone else.' Advertisement Any future escape attempts would be impossible in his cell at Mid State, he insisted. 8 'If I hadn't done it with him, I'd probably still be out somewhere,' Sweat said of his partner-in-crime, Richard Matt (pictured). AP 'If you cut through the walls, you'd just be in another cell. And if you cut through the basement — I mean, they use the basement in this prison.' Asked if he was lonely, tears began to well in Sweat's eyes before he replied, 'Yes.' Despite recent reports that he has a girlfriend, Sweat told The Post the relationship failed because she could not keep up with the constant transfers to the furthest corners of the state. Sweat passes the days by reading books — currently, the 'Wheel of Time' series — and listening to his radio. Between the prison's routine 6 a.m. wakeup call and his 9 p.m. bedtime, he works out by putting his books into a bag, and lifting it 'like a dumbbell.' 8 More than 1,500 law enforcement agents hunted Matt and Sweat during the 23-day manhunt, which cost the state a whopping $23 million. Getty Images His favorite activity is interacting with wildlife through the two windows in a tiny room attached to his cell, which he referred to as a 'pen.' 'There are birds and squirrels and stuff that come in here. I had a rabbit all winter. I tried to feed it carrots — it didn't really like them, I guess because they were steamed — but it ate them anyways, because it was free food. 'I have a groundhog that should be coming back around as the weather warms up,' Sweat said, smiling. 8 Sweat, who now spends his days in an 18-by-5-foot cell, had not had a visitor in the three years before The Post came calling on May 31, he said. He laughed upon learning that Joyce Mitchell, 61, remains married to her husband, Lyle. Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie alleged in 2015 that she had plotted with Sweat and Matt to murder Lyle. 'Wow. She was ready to knock him off, and I guess he refused to believe it — but that's a known fact. That's crazy,' Sweat said, shaking his head. Still, he has nothing but sympathy for Joyce Mitchell, who got out of prison in 2020. 'She lost her job and this affected her and her family,' he said. 'Five years is a long time. It probably did a number on her.'

Bruises, Threats And Obama-Shaped MDMA: 7 Shocking Revelations From Diddy's Trial
Bruises, Threats And Obama-Shaped MDMA: 7 Shocking Revelations From Diddy's Trial

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bruises, Threats And Obama-Shaped MDMA: 7 Shocking Revelations From Diddy's Trial

Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial is well underway, with witnesses painting a picture of a violent and controlling Combs. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan have accused the media mogul of using his money and prestige to run a criminal enterprise since at least 2004. He was indicted on five federal charges: one count of racketeering conspiracy, two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion, and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. Combs' apparent downfall comes after his ex, R&B singer Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura filed a damning lawsuit against him in November 2023. The lawsuit was settled quickly and quietly the following day, but additional accusers came forward alleging that Combs had abused and/or sexually violated them. Some of the accusers were minors at the time of the alleged events. He has denied the allegations against him and pleaded not guilty to the charges. He also rejected a plea deal shortly before the trial started. Combs' attorneys have attempted to downplay the case against him as an attempt to bring down a thriving Black man. In the months that followed, federal authorities raided his homes in Los Angeles and Miami, and CNN released a video showing Combs attacking Ventura in the hallway of a Los Angeles hotel in 2016. Combs, who was once celebrated as a beacon of Black male success, has been held at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center since his arrest in September. The trial, which is not being televised or recorded, is expected to last around two months. Jury selection began on May 5. Opening statements occurred the following Monday. Many of the witnesses who have taken the stand essentially described Combs as evil. Kid Cudi called him a 'marvel supervillain;' Ventura said his 'eyes [would] go black;' and Bryana Bongolan, a friend to Ventura, said he called himself the 'devil.' If convicted, Combs could spend the rest of his life in jail. Here's a look at some of the most explosive and jarring moments from the trial. 'There was a line of questioning where your client was nodding vigorously and looking at the jury,' Judge Arun Subramanian told Combs' attorneys on June 5, according to NBC News. 'There should be no efforts to have any interactions with this jury.' The nodding the judge referred to came while Bongolan was on the stand. The judge said that Combs would be removed from the courtroom if he continued. Combs' lead attorney Marc Agnifilo told the judge that the interaction is 'not going to happen again.' 'This cannot happen again,' Subramanian reiterated. A pregnant Ventura took the stand for about a week at the beginning of the trial. At one point, she described what Combs called 'freak-offs.' 'It basically entails the hiring of an escort and setting up this experience so that I could perform for Sean,' Ventura said. The freak-offs allowed for Combs to 'watch me with the other person and actually direct us on what we were doing,' she added. 'Eventually it became a job for me, pretty much,' she claimed, adding that she had to personally reach out to the male escorts and had to participate in the freak-offs even if she was menstruating. She also claimed that he recorded the performances and used them as blackmail against her. Ventura described Combs during sexual encounters: 'His eyes go black. The version of him I was in love with was no longer there,' she said, according to The New York Times. Ventura also discussed being physically abused by Combs. Prosecutors showed the jury images of Ventura's injuries. Some of those images included bruises on her face, back and thigh, and a gash on her eyebrow, USA Today reported. Within two weeks of testifying, Ventura gave birth to her third child with her husband, Alex Fine. Kid Cudi, born Scott Mescudi, briefly dated Ventura in 2011. Mescudi testified on May 22 that Combs broke into his home when he was with Ventura and that he believes he set his luxury vehicle on fire with a Molotov cocktail. 'I'm going to be very candid,' Mescudi said while describing the break-in, according to Rolling Stone. 'I was like, 'Motherfucker, are you in my house?' And he said, 'I just want to talk to you.' I was like, 'I'm on my way over right now.' He was like, 'I'm here.'' But Mescudi did not find Combs when he arrived. He did, however, find that his dog was locked in a bathroom and that Christmas presents had been opened. He said Combs wanted to talk to him, but Mescudi said he responded by telling him, 'You broke into my house. You messed with my dog... Like, I don't want to talk to you.' Mescudi and Ventura stopped seeing each other in late December of 2011. 'The drama, it was just getting out of hand,' Mescudi testified. 'I kind of wanted to give her some space … for my safety, for her safety…' He also told the courtroom that he believed Ventura was 'playing' both him and Combs. Combs' former personal assistant from 2007 to 2009, David James, testified on May 19 that he personally acquired drugs for Combs before. James claimed that Combs used to take opiates during the day and ecstasy at night, according to CNN. Some of the ecstasy pills were shaped like former President Barack Obama, according to James. James also described Combs' drug use in more depth, including informing the jury of a 'medicine bag' that Combs brought around with him, according to Business Insider. 'There were probably 25 to 30 different pillboxes or pill bottles,' James said, according to BI. 'Some were like Advil, Tylenol. He had water pills to help him lose weight. He had Viagra in there. He had some pills that helped increase his sperm count, for example.' 'He did have ecstasy and Percocets in there, as well,' James added. Former member of the music groups Danity Kane and Diddy—Dirty Money, Dawn Richard, testified on May 16 that Combs compelled people in his orbit to stay quiet because 'where he comes from, people who say something can end up missing.' Richard described watching Combs beat Ventura when she took too long to cook his dinner, Business Insider reported. 'He took the skillet with the eggs in it and tried to hit her in the head, and she fell to the ground,' Richard testified. The next day, Combs told Richard and Ventura that 'what we saw was passion, and it was what lovers in a relationship do.' He also told them 'he was trying to take us to the top, and that, where he comes from, people go missing if they say things like that, like, if people talk. And then he gave us flowers,' according to Business Insider's report. Richard filed her own lawsuit against Combs in September 2024. She accused him of sexual assault, retaliation, threatening to end her life and refusing to pay her. Capricorn Clark had an on-and-off working relationship with Combs between 2004 and 2018, at one point working as his former assistant and as the marketing head for Sean Jean at another. She testified on May 27 that Combs kidnapped her at gunpoint in 2011 to kill Mescudi when he learned that Ventura was dating him. According to Clark, Combs came to her home in the early morning with a gun out, told her to get dressed, and said, 'We're going to go kill [Mescudi],' according to NPR. They went inside of Mescudi's house while he was not home, which Mescudi described in his own testimony. Clark claimed that Combs threatened to kill her if she informed the authorities. In a separate instance, Clark said Combs locked her in a building in Manhattan and subjected her to numerous lie detector tests when some of his jewelry went missing, NPR also reported. She said the man testing her told her that she would be 'thrown into the East River' if she failed. 'I was petrified,' Clark said. Mia, the pseudonym for a former assistant for Combs who he tasked with keeping an eye on Ventura, while taking the stand on May 29, described an instance in which Combs attacked Ventura at Prince's house in 2011 or 2012, according to The New York Times. 'Cass and I debated like little kids if we should sneak out of the house,' Mia reportedly said. But Combs showed up at the party. 'Oh, crap,' Mia recalled thinking when she saw her then-boss. 'Me and Cass just booked it.' When Combs caught them, he beat Cassie until a security guard for Prince interfered, according to USA Today. Mia claimed she was fired the next day for 'being insubordinate.' While on the stand, she also testified that Combs sexually assaulted her on more than one occasion. 'I couldn't tell him no about a sandwich — I couldn't tell him no about anything,' she said, according to the Times. 'There was no way I could tell him no, because then he would know that I thought what he was doing was wrong and then I would be a target.' Need help? Visit RAINN's National Sexual Assault Online Hotline or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center's website. Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Trump Weighs In On Possible Sean 'Diddy' Combs Pardon: 'He Used To Really Like Me' Cassie's Lawsuit Against Diddy Started A Movement Many Didn't See Coming 'Marvel Supervillain': Kid Cudi Describes Meeting With Diddy After Molotov Cocktail Hit His Porsche

'Bitcoin Family' hides crypto codes etched onto metal cards on four continents after recent kidnappings
'Bitcoin Family' hides crypto codes etched onto metal cards on four continents after recent kidnappings

CNBC

time3 hours ago

  • CNBC

'Bitcoin Family' hides crypto codes etched onto metal cards on four continents after recent kidnappings

A wave of high-profile kidnappings targeting cryptocurrency executives has rattled the industry — and prompted a quiet security revolution among some of its most visible evangelists. Didi Taihuttu, patriarch of the so-called "Bitcoin Family," said he overhauled the family's entire security setup after a string of threats. The Taihuttus — who sold everything they owned in 2017, from their house to their shoes, to go all-in on bitcoin when it was trading around $900 — have long lived on the outer edge of crypto ideology. They travel full-time with their three daughters and remain entirely unbanked. Over the past eight months, he said, the family ditched hardware wallets in favor of a hybrid system: Part analog, part digital, with seed phrases encrypted, split, and stored either through blockchain-based encryption services or hidden across four continents. "We have changed everything," Taihuttu told CNBC on a call from Phuket, Thailand. "Even if someone held me at gunpoint, I can't give them more than what's on my wallet on my phone. And that's not a lot." CNBC first reported on the family's unconventional storage system in 2022, when Taihuttu described hiding hardware wallets across multiple continents — in places ranging from rental apartments in Europe to self-storage units in South America. As physical attacks on crypto holders become more frequent, even they are rethinking their exposure. This week, Moroccan police arrested a 24-year-old suspected of orchestrating a series of brutal kidnappings targeting crypto executives. One victim, the father of a crypto millionaire, was allegedly held for days in a house south of Paris — and reportedly had a finger severed during the ordeal. In a separate case earlier this year, a co-founder of French wallet firm Ledger and his wife were abducted from their home in central France in a ransom scheme that also targeted another Ledger executive. Last month in New York, authorities said, a 28-year-old Italian tourist was kidnapped and tortured for 17 days in a Manhattan apartment by attackers trying to extract his bitcoin password — shocking him with wires, beating him with a gun, and strapping an Apple AirTag around his neck to track his movements. The common thread: The pursuit of crypto credentials that enable instant, irreversible transfers of virtual assets. "It is definitely frightening to see a lot of these kidnappings happen," said JP Richardson, CEO of crypto wallet company Exodus. He urged users to take security into their own hands by choosing self-custody, storing larger sums on hardware wallets, and — for those holding significant assets — exploring multi-signature wallets, a setup typically used by institutions. Richardson also recommended spreading funds across different wallet types and avoiding large balances in hot wallets to reduce risk without sacrificing flexibility. That rising sense of vulnerability is fueling a new demand for physical protection with insurance firms now racing to offer kidnap and ransom (K&R) policies tailored to crypto holders. But Taihuttu isn't waiting for corporate solutions. He's opted for complete decentralization — of not just his finances, but his personal risk profile. As the family prepares to return to Europe from Thailand, safety has become a constant topic of conversation. "We've been talking about it a lot as a family," Taihuttu said. "My kids read the news, too — especially that story in France, where the daughter of a CEO was almost kidnapped on the street." Now, he said, his daughters are asking difficult questions: What if someone tries to kidnap us? What's the plan? Though the girls carry only small amounts of crypto in their personal wallets, the family has decided to avoid France entirely. "We got a little bit famous in a niche market — but that niche is becoming a really big market now," Taihuttu said. "And I think we'll see more and more of these robberies. So yeah, we're definitely going to skip France." Even in Thailand, Taihuttu recently stopped posting travel updates and filming at home after receiving disturbing messages from strangers who claimed to have identified his location from YouTube vlogs. "We stayed in a very beautiful house for six months — then I started getting emails from people who figured out which house it was. They warned me to be careful, told me not to leave my kids alone," he said. "So we moved. And now we don't film anything at all." "It's a strange world at the moment," he said. "So we're taking our own precautions — and when it comes to wallets, we're now completely hardware wallet-less. We don't use any hardware wallets anymore." The family's new system involves splitting a single 24-word bitcoin seed phrase — the cryptographic key that unlocks access to their crypto holdings — into four sets of six words, each stored in a different geographic location. Some are kept digitally through blockchain-based encryption platforms, while others are etched by hand into fireproof steel plates using a hammer and letter punch, then hidden in physical locations across four continents. "Even if someone finds 18 of the 24 words, they can't do anything," Taihuttu explained. On top of that, he's added a layer of personal encryption, swapping out select words to throw off would-be attackers. The method is simple, but effective. "You only need to remember which ones you changed," he said. Part of the reason for ditching hardware wallets, Taihuttu said, was a growing mistrust of third-party devices. Concerns about backdoors and remote access features — including a controversial update by Ledger in 2023 — prompted the family to abandon physical hardware altogether in favor of encrypted paper and steel backups. While the family still holds some crypto in "hot" wallets — for daily spending or to run their algorithmic trading strategy — those funds are protected by multi-signature approvals, which require multiple parties to sign off before a transaction can be executed. The Taihuttus use Safe — formerly Gnosis Safe — for ether and other altcoins, and similarly layered setups for bitcoin stored on centralized platforms like Bybit. About 65% of the family's crypto is locked in cold storage across four continents — a decentralized system Taihuttu prefers to centralized vaults like the Swiss Alps bunker used by Coinbase-owned Xapo. Those facilities may offer physical protection and inheritance services, but Taihuttu said they require too much trust. "What happens if one of those companies goes bankrupt? Will I still have access?" he said. "You're putting your capital back in someone else's hands." Instead, Taihuttu holds his own keys — hidden across the globe. He can top up the wallets remotely with new deposits, but accessing them would require at least one international trip, depending on which fragments of the seed phrase are needed. The funds, he added, are intended as a long-term pension to be accessed only if bitcoin hits $1 million — a milestone he's targeting for 2033. The shift toward multiparty protections extends beyond just multi-signature. Multi-party computation, or MPC, is gaining traction as a more advanced security model. Instead of storing private keys in one place — a vulnerability known as a "single point of compromise" — MPC splits a key into encrypted shares distributed across multiple parties. Transactions can only go through when a threshold number of those parties approve, sharply reducing the risk of theft or unauthorized access. Multi-signature wallets require several parties to approve a transaction. MPC takes that further by cryptographically splitting the private key itself, ensuring that no single individual ever holds the full key — not even their own complete share. The shift comes amid renewed scrutiny of centralized crypto platforms like Coinbase, which recently disclosed a data breach affecting tens of thousands of customers. Taihuttu, for his part, says 80% of his trading now happens on decentralized exchanges like Apex — a peer-to-peer platform that allows users to set buy and sell orders without relinquishing custody of their funds, marking a return to crypto's original ethos. While he declined to reveal his total holdings, Taihuttu did share his goal for the current bull cycle: a $100 million net worth, with 60% still held in bitcoin. The rest is a mix of ether, layer-1 tokens like solana, link, sui, and a growing number of AI and education-focused startups — including his own platform offering blockchain and life-skills courses for kids. Lately, he's also considering stepping back from the spotlight. "It's really my passion to create content. It's really what I love to do every day," he said. "But if it's not safe anymore for my daughters ... I really need to think about them."

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