logo
How crypto crime is morphing into real-life violence

How crypto crime is morphing into real-life violence

Fast Company29-05-2025

A man says he was tortured for weeks in a New York townhouse. Another in Paris was held for ransom and his finger cut off. A couple in Connecticut were carjacked, beaten and thrown into a van.
All, authorities allege, were victims tied to cryptocurrency-related crimes that have spilled out from behind computer screens and into the real world as the largely unregulated currency surges in value.
While crypto thefts are not new, the use of physical violence is a far more recent trend, said John Griffin, a finance professor at the University of Texas in Austin who tracks financial crimes.
'I think this kind of physical violence is a natural manifestation of the emboldened nature of crypto activities,' he said. 'Things that might clearly be outside of social norms in other spaces — like robbing a bank — are somehow just part of the game here.'
Kidnapping, burglary and torture allegations
In the New York case, two American crypto investors — John Woeltz and William Duplessie — have been arrested on kidnapping and assault charges in recent days after a 28-year-old Italian man told police they tortured him for weeks to get his Bitcoin password. Attorneys for both men declined to comment.
While the allegations are still emerging, they come just weeks after 13 people were indicted on federal charges in Washington, D.C., accused of combining computer hacking and money laundering with old-fashioned impersonation and burglary to steal more than $260 million from victims' cryptocurrency accounts.
Some are accused of hacking websites and servers to steal cryptocurrency databases and identify targets, but others are alleged to have broken into victims' homes to steal their 'hardware wallets' — devices that provide access to their crypto accounts.
The case stemmed from an investigation that started after a couple in Connecticut last year were forced out of a Lamborghini SUV, assaulted and bound in the back of a van. Authorities allege the incident was a ransom plot targeting the couple's son — who they say helped steal more than $240 million worth of Bitcoin from a single victim. The son has not been charged, but is being detained on an unspecified 'federal misdemeanor offense' charge, according to online jail records. Police stopped the carjacking and arrested six men.
Meanwhile in France, kidnappings of wealthy cryptocurrency holders and their relatives in ransom plots have spooked the industry.
Attackers recently kidnapped the father of a crypto entrepreneur while he was out walking his dog, and sent videos to the son including one showing the dad's finger being severed as they demanded millions of euros in ransom, prosecutors allege. Police freed the father and arrested several suspects.
Earlier this year, men in masks attempted to drag the daughter of Pierre Noizat, the CEO and a founder of the Bitcoin exchange platform Paymium, into a van, but were thwarted by a shopkeeper armed with a fire extinguisher.
And in January, the co-founder of French crypto-wallet firm Ledger, David Balland, and his wife were also kidnapped for ransom from their home in the region of Cher of central France. They also were rescued by police and 10 people were arrested.
Cryptocurrency crime likely fueled by big money, little regulation
The FBI recently released its 2024 internet crime report that tallied nearly 860,000 complaints of suspected internet crime and a record $16.6 billion in reported losses — a 33% increase in losses compared with 2023.
As a group, cryptocurrency theft victims reported the most losses — more than $6.5 billion.
The agency and experts say the crypto crime underworld is likely being fueled by the large amounts of money at stake – combined with weak regulation of cryptocurrency that allows many transactions to be made without identity documents.
Violence may be increasing for several reasons including that criminals believe they can get away with crypto theft because transactions are hard to trace and often cloaked by anonymity, according to the crypto tracing firm TRM Labs. And crypto holders are getting easier to identify because of the prevalence of personal information online and people flaunting their crypto wealth on social media, the firm says.
Phil Ariss, TRM Labs' director of UK public sector relations, said crypto also may be attracting criminal groups that have long used violence.
'As long as there's a viable route to launder or liquidate stolen assets, it makes little difference to the offender whether the target is a high-value watch or a crypto wallet,' Ariss said in a statement. 'Cryptocurrency is now firmly in the mainstream, and as a result, our traditional understanding of physical threat and robbery needs to evolve accordingly.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US Ether ETFs Draw $812 Million in Longest Inflow Streak of 2025
US Ether ETFs Draw $812 Million in Longest Inflow Streak of 2025

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

US Ether ETFs Draw $812 Million in Longest Inflow Streak of 2025

US exchange-traded funds that invest directly in Ether are enjoying their longest streak of daily inflows this year, signaling renewed appetite for the second-largest cryptocurrency among institutional investors. The group of nine ETFs has pulled in $812 million over 14 consecutive trading sessions of inflows, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That's the strongest run in 2025 and comes after open interest for Ether futures offered by CME Group surged about 65% in May to approach record highs.

Is Trump in Epstein documents as Elon Musk's tweet says? President has already appeared
Is Trump in Epstein documents as Elon Musk's tweet says? President has already appeared

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Is Trump in Epstein documents as Elon Musk's tweet says? President has already appeared

In the exploding feud between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump, Musk claimed on June 5 that Trump is in documents about Jeffrey Epstein so far unreleased by the FBI and claimed that is why they haven't been released. Attorney General Pam Bondi released about 200 pages of documents in late February, but none was new, disappointing many who hoped to see famous names. She has directed the FBI to release thousands more, but it has been months and nothing has surfaced. Trump, a Palm Beach neighbor of Epstein's, has already appeared in legal documents concerning the financier's crimes but never in a way that implicates him. In the 1990s, Trump rode on aircraft owned by the sexual predator, according to flight logs released in two lawsuits. But that was 30-plus years ago. In Palm Beach County state attorney documents, an image of a message pad communication seized in a Palm Beach police search appeared, but there is nothing more than Trump's name and a phone number. Epstein pleaded guilty to two prostitution-related felonies in 2008 and spent 13 months in jail. Then-State Attorney Barry Krischer sent the case to a grand jury, which resulted in a single solicitation charge. The Palm Beach sued to get the transcripts of that secret proceeding and gained the release in summer 2024 after nearly five years. Only two victims, out of dozens found by the police, testified and the head of the crimes against children unit called them both prostitutes. Trump once said his neighbor was a great guy. I've known Jeff (Epstein) for 15 years. Terrific guy,' Trump told New York magazine in 2002. 'He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.' But when Epstein was arrested in 2019 on sex trafficking charges, Trump said, "I'm not a fan." More: Is Donald Trump all over Jeffrey Epstein documents released in Palm Beach Post suit? In 2019, Epstein was charged by federal prosecutors in New York with sex trafficking minors. He was found dead, hanging in his jail cell, less than a month later. While he was alive, Epstein hobnobbed with many politicians and celebrities, including two who had either reached or were to reach the White House. Trump wasn't the only president to hitch a ride on Epstein's jets. Bill Clinton also took flights after he left office in early 2001. Trump was first elected president in 2016. Here's what to know about some of Epstein's famous passengers: More: Jeffrey Epstein 2006 grand jury documents are public. Read for yourself what happened Some big names, including Great Britain's Prince Andrew, either flew into or out of Palm Beach International Airport (PBIA), where Epstein parked his planes when he stayed at his mansion on El Brillo Way in Palm Beach. In a strange entry in 1998, a pilot noted that Sarah Ferguson and her children met the plane at the Lantana airport after an emergency. The Cessna had been flying from Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport, but there was no note that Prince Andrew was onboard, only Epstein. Epstein's housekeeper, Juan Alessi, testified that the divorced Duchess of York dropped by Epstein's Palm Beach mansion one time, according to documents in a lawsuit released in January. "I think Sarah was there only once and for a short time," he said. "I don't think she slept in there. I cannot remember. I think she was visiting Wellington and she came to the house and we met her." Epstein reportedly once restructured and paid off a debt for the duchess. 'I, personally, on behalf of myself, deeply regret that Jeffrey Epstein became involved in any way with me,' she said in 2011 before he was arrested on charges in New York. 'I abhor pedophilia and any sexual abuse of children and know that this was a gigantic error of judgment on my behalf. I am just so contrite I cannot say.' Celebs included supermodel Naomi Campbell, actor Kevin Spacey and comedian Chris Tucker. Campbell took five flights aboard the Lolita Express in 2001 and 2003. Two originated in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein owned an island that was known as a place of debauchery. A couple of the flights went to the Sao Paulo, Brazil area. More: Paris Fashion Week 2023: See Florence Pugh, Naomi Campbell, more stars at stunning shows Epstein was always present at Victoria's Secret shows where Campbell saw him. She said she met him in 2001 after her boyfriend Flavio Briatore, of Benetton clothing fame, introduced him. Campbell has repeatedly denied any knowledge of Epstein's sexual offenses, saying: 'What he's done is indefensible. And when I had heard what he had done, it sickened me to my stomach just like everybody else. … Right now I stand with the victims." Inside the grand jury documents Post got Jeffrey Epstein prosecutor called 2 underage victims 'prostitutes.' Were they charged? It's impossible to tell whether any of these passengers flew while underage girls were aboard. According to notes that pilots made from the flights, they used mainly initials and first names for passengers. Trump flew on Epstein's planes at least eight times, according to flight logs, most of the time to and from the airport in Teterboro, New Jersey, where Epstein was arrested on sex trafficking charges in July 2019. Trump's family tagged along on a May 15, 1994, trip to Washington, D.C. Aboard were then-wife Marla Maples and their daughter, Tiffany. She was about 7 months old and her nanny was in tow. Trump's third child and second son, Eric, flew on an Aug. 13, 1995, flight with his father from Palm Beach International to Teterboro, flight logs show. Teterboro is 12 miles from Manhattan, where Trump resided starting in 1983 until he claimed Mar-a-Lago as his primary residence in 2017. His penthouse in Trump Tower is 11,000 square feet and three stories high. Teterboro is considered a "reliever" airport, which handles smaller aircraft that weigh less than 100,000 pounds. No scheduled aircraft fly in or out of the airport, according to its website. Trump and Epstein had ties in Palm Beach. In the 1990s, they sometimes partied together. They also got into a bidding war in 2004 for a Palm Beach oceanfront estate offered in a bankruptcy auction. It was owned by Abe Gosman, the nursing home magnate who had hit hard times. Trump won, paying more than $41 million. More: Making sense of Jeffrey Epstein's grand jury transcript and the 5-year fight to release it Clinton was on Epstein planes for at least 17 flights in 2002-03 after he left office in 2001. The former president went to some exotic places aboard those flights — Siberia, Morocco, China and Armenia, to name a few — with some famous people such as actor Kevin Spacey and comedian Chris Tucker. News reports said Spacey and Tucker flew to help the Clinton Foundation with its battle against AIDS. More: Jeffrey Epstein secret transcripts: Victim was asked, Do you know 'you committed a crime?' Flight logs indicate that Spacey took a flight from the U.S. Virgin Islands to PBIA on Sept. 15, 2002, with Epstein and Clinton. The flight with Chris Tucker, which didn't appear to include Clinton, occurred six days later going from JFK International Airport in New York to Vilo do Porto, Portugal. Clinton's aide Doug Bands was on most of the flights that Clinton was. Two trips with Clinton had no notes that indicated U.S. Secret Service agents were aboard. Epstein picked up Clinton in Siberia and flew him to a U.S. Naval base in Japan on May 20, 2002. Secret Service was not noted. Most entries concerning Clinton did. One other flight possibly did not include agents, but part of the entry was illegible. That was on Nov. 9, 2003, from Hong Kong to Sichuan Province in China. Clinton took off from PBIA in February and March 2002 to Miami International and JFK, respectively. Flight logs don't indicate why any of the trips were taken. A Clinton spokesperson said in 2019 that he knew "nothing" about the crimes Epstein pleaded guilty to in Florida or the sex-trafficking crimes he was charged with that year. Epstein flew family members several times, often to New York or nearby. His parents, Seymour and Paula, lived in a West Palm Beach condo. Epstein and his brother, Mark, grew up on the Coney Island section of Brooklyn. Seymour worked for the New York Parks Department. Mark, Jeffrey's younger brother, took at least one flight. More: POST EXCLUSIVE: Never-before-seen Jeffrey Epstein biography surfaces Paula flew several times aboard Jeffrey's jets in the late 1990s and early 2000s, almost always between PBIA and Teterboro. Once she went to Westchester County Airport. Paula held on to their West Palm Beach condo until she died in 2004. Seymour had passed in 1991. Glenn and Eva Andersson Dubin, who have a waterfront home in Palm Beach, flew on Epstein's aircraft occasionally. Eva was Epstein's girlfriend for more than a decade before she married Glenn in 1994. Glenn and Eva are philanthropists involved in New York and that's often where they flew, most often with their three girls in tow and the nannies. Glenn is a venture capitalist and Eva is a physician who established the Dubin Breast Cancer Center at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. She had had breast cancer herself. Eva testified for Epstein's next girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, in Maxwell's trial on sex trafficking charges in December 2021. Maxwell was convicted. Eva said she saw no inappropriate conduct from Epstein. More: How does this doctor-model-survivor keep her energy up? After Epstein had served his 13 months at the Palm Beach County Jail for pleading guilty to two prostitution-related felonies, Eva in 2009 famously told his probation officer that she was "100% comfortable" with him being around her girls at Thanksgiving dinner. The children were under 18 at the time. The couple distanced themselves from Epstein after he was arrested on sex-trafficking charges in 2019. Holly Baltz is the investigations editor at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at hbaltz@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Elon Musk tweet says Trump in Epstein documents. He already appeared

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store