• About Us
  • Advertise
AltcoinReporter
  • Home
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Blockchain
    • Altcoins
    • DeFi
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Blockchain
    • Altcoins
    • DeFi
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
AltcoinReporter
No Result
View All Result
Home Blockchain

France Charges 88 Over Crypto Kidnappings as Attacks Hit 1 Every 2 Days

France has recorded 47 crypto kidnappings in 2026, one every 2.5 days. Prosecutors charged 88 people including minors. Fingers severed. Families targeted. Full story.

Salar Salek by Salar Salek
April 28, 2026
in Blockchain
France Charges 88 Over Crypto Kidnappings as Attacks Hit 1 Every 2 Days

Every two and a half days, someone in France is kidnapped because they own crypto. Not hacked. Not scammed. Physically grabbed, tied up, and forced to hand over their digital assets at knifepoint. Sometimes worse.

French prosecutors have now charged 88 people across 12 crypto-related kidnapping cases. More than 10 of the suspects are minors. Seventy-five are being held in pretrial detention. And the numbers keep getting worse. France has recorded 47 crypto kidnappings in 2026 alone, up from 67 in all of 2025 and 18 in 2024. Since 2023, there have been 135 incidents total.

Related articles

Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

July 9, 2026
A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

July 9, 2026

France now accounts for roughly 40% of all crypto ransom attacks in Europe. The country that wanted to be the continent’s crypto capital has become its most dangerous place to hold digital assets.

What Are Crypto Wrench Attacks?

The name comes from a simple idea. You do not need to hack someone’s wallet if you can threaten them with a wrench until they unlock it themselves.

A wrench attack skips every layer of digital security. Multi-factor authentication, hardware wallets, cold storage, encrypted seed phrases. None of it matters when someone is holding a knife to your child. The attacker targets the person, not the technology. Once the victim transfers the crypto under duress, the transaction is irreversible. There is no bank to call. No chargeback to file. The money is gone in seconds.

CertiK reported that wrench attacks increased 75% globally in 2025, with France leading all countries at 19 confirmed incidents out of 72 worldwide. That is more than twice the number recorded in the United States. The total confirmed losses reached $40.9 million, though the real number is likely much higher because many attacks are reported as standard robberies with no mention of crypto.

How Bad Has It Gotten in France?

The cases read like crime thriller plots, except they are real.

On April 13, four attackers stormed a family home in Burgundy. They tied up the father, a crypto entrepreneur, and demanded $400,000. When they discovered his holdings were locked in a time-delayed wallet that would not release funds for hours, they took his wife and 11-year-old son instead. France’s elite GIGN tactical unit deployed 100 officers and rescued both hostages from a hotel room the following day. No ransom was paid.

In January 2025, Ledger co-founder David Balland was kidnapped along with his partner. During the attack, one of his fingers was severed and sent to associates as part of the ransom demand. He was rescued after a police operation.

In March 2026, criminals impersonating police officers broke into a home in Versailles and forced a couple in their late 50s to transfer roughly $1 million in Bitcoin at knifepoint.

In February 2026, a magistrate and her mother were abducted in a plot targeting her partner, a crypto executive in Lyon. Six suspects were arrested, including a minor recruited through Telegram.

These are not random street crimes. Prosecutors found repeat suspects appearing across multiple cases, confirming that structured criminal networks are running these operations. Some are organised from outside France, with local participants recruited through messaging apps.

How Are Criminals Finding Their Targets?

This is the part that should make every crypto holder uncomfortable. Attackers are using a combination of public blockchain data, social media posts, leaked personal information, and in at least one case, a French tax official who sold sensitive data directly to criminal groups.

The pool of targets has widened. Early wrench attacks focused on high-profile executives and founders. Now mid-level holders are getting hit too, sometimes based on nothing more than an Instagram post showing a luxury purchase or a conference badge photo that reveals their name and company.

Jameson Lopp, a prominent Bitcoin security researcher, put it simply: “It’s far easier than trying to rob a bank.” Rising asset prices have increased the payoff from a single attack. Improvements in digital security have made hacking harder. Physical violence has become the path of least resistance.

What Is France Doing About It?

The government is finally treating this as a crisis. At Paris Blockchain Week, Interior Ministry delegate Jean-Didier Berger announced that new protection measures are being prepared with Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez. A police motorcade escorted VIP guests to the conference dinner at the Palace of Versailles. Security was visibly reinforced at every venue.

A new prevention platform has been launched and attracted thousands of sign-ups from concerned crypto holders. The next phase will include expanded use of blockchain analytics to trace ransom payments, public awareness campaigns focused on privacy, and direct personal security measures.

On the enforcement side, ZachXBT helped freeze $800,000 in ransom funds following the kidnapping of a French content creator’s father, with Binance’s security team tracing payments across the blockchain. That kind of collaboration between on-chain investigators and exchanges is becoming more common but remains reactive rather than preventive.

How Can Crypto Holders Protect Themselves?

Security researchers recommend several practical steps. Use multi-signature wallets that require multiple approvals to move funds, so no single person being coerced can complete a transfer. Set withdrawal limits and time locks on large holdings, which is exactly what saved the Burgundy family. Keep your crypto holdings private. Do not post about gains, portfolio size, or hardware wallets on social media. Use a separate phone and email for crypto activity. Vary your daily routines. Do not wear branded crypto merchandise in public.

For anyone holding significant amounts, consider a decoy wallet with a small balance that you can hand over under duress while your main holdings remain in a separate, hidden, time-locked setup. Some security firms now offer physical security assessments specifically for crypto holders.

The uncomfortable truth is that crypto’s greatest feature, self-custody, is also its greatest vulnerability in the physical world. When you are your own bank, you are also your own security guard. And in France in 2026, that job has never been more dangerous.

Salar Salek

Salar Salek Verified AltcoinReporter Author

Salar covers cryptocurrency markets, blockchain technology, DeFi, and emerging digital asset trends for AltcoinReporter. With a background in technology and finance, he has been actively following and investing in the...

Read More
Tags: BitcoinBlockchainRegulationSecurityWallets

Related Posts

Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

by Salar Salek
July 9, 2026
0

When people picture the companies racing to issue stablecoins, they usually think of crypto-native names: Circle, Tether, Ripple, Paxos. Financial...

A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

by Salar Salek
July 9, 2026
0

Behind every romance scam is a person who believed they had met someone real. A message that felt genuine. A...

SWIFT Just Launched a Blockchain Ledger for 24/7 Global Payments With 17 Banks

SWIFT Just Launched a Blockchain Ledger for 24/7 Global Payments With 17 Banks

by Salar Salek
July 9, 2026
0

For fifty years, SWIFT has been the invisible plumbing of global finance. When a bank in Singapore sends money to...

The IMF Just Warned That Tokenization Could Make Finance More Vulnerable to Shocks

The IMF Just Warned That Tokenization Could Make Finance More Vulnerable to Shocks

by Salar Salek
July 5, 2026
0

For most of 2026, tokenization has been the crypto industry's cleanest bull case. While Bitcoin fell and altcoins bled, the...

Ethical Hackers Just Found a $3,000 Bug That Could Have Drained $70 Billion From Aptos

Ethical Hackers Just Found a $3,000 Bug That Could Have Drained $70 Billion From Aptos

by Salar Salek
July 5, 2026
0

In crypto, the scariest vulnerabilities aren't the ones that require nation-state resources. They're the ones that a determined attacker could...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Solana Alpenglow Upgrade 2026: Launch Date, Features, and What It Means for SOL

Solana Alpenglow Upgrade 2026: Launch Date, Features, and What It Means for SOL

April 18, 2026
Justin Sun vs WLFI: “See You in Court” as Backdoor Token Freeze Row Explodes

Justin Sun vs WLFI: “See You in Court” as Backdoor Token Freeze Row Explodes

April 13, 2026
Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

April 16, 2026
Pi Network Completes Protocol 23 and Sets June 2 Deadline for Node Operators

Pi Network Completes Protocol 23 and Sets June 2 Deadline for Node Operators

May 27, 2026
North Korea’s Six-Month Con: How Hackers Stole $286M from Solana’s Drift Protocol

North Korea’s Six-Month Con: How Hackers Stole $286M from Solana’s Drift Protocol

0
Ethereum’s Glamsterdam Upgrade: What It Is and Why It Matters in 2026

Ethereum’s Glamsterdam Upgrade: What It Is and Why It Matters in 2026

0
Bitcoin’s Worst Q1 Since 2018: Can April Turn the Tide?

Bitcoin’s Worst Q1 Since 2018: Can April Turn the Tide?

0
Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

Former UK Chancellor Kwarteng Leads Bitcoin Firm as Farage Backs BTC

0
Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

Sony Just Won US Approval to Launch a Dollar Stablecoin for Games and Anime

July 9, 2026
Japan’s Collapsing Yen Is Pushing Companies Into Bitcoin and XRP

Japan’s Collapsing Yen Is Pushing Companies Into Bitcoin and XRP

July 9, 2026
A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

A 20-Year-Old’s Crypto Wallet Moved $122 Million in Romance-Scam Cash, Interpol Says

July 9, 2026
SWIFT Just Launched a Blockchain Ledger for 24/7 Global Payments With 17 Banks

SWIFT Just Launched a Blockchain Ledger for 24/7 Global Payments With 17 Banks

July 9, 2026

About

AltcoinReporter

AltcoinReporter is an independent crypto news platform built to keep you ahead of the market. We cover everything from Bitcoin and altcoins to DeFi, NFTs, regulation, and emerging blockchain technology.


Our editorial team delivers accurate news, detailed market analysis, and expert insights, with every article written and reviewed by named contributors. We are committed to transparent, independent reporting our readers can trust.

News

  • Altcoins
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • DeFi
  • Ethereum
  • NFT

Reviews

  • Exchanges
  • NFT Marketplaces
  • Wallets

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Write for Us
  • Contact Us

Disclaimer: AltcoinReporter.com provides cryptocurrency news for informational purposes only, not financial, investment, or legal advice. Crypto markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research and consult a financial advisor before investing. We may earn compensation through affiliate links, ads, and sponsored content, which are clearly labelled. AltcoinReporter is not responsible for any financial losses resulting from information on this site.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Ethics
  • Corrections
  • Editorial Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 AltcoinReporter. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Altcoins
    • Bitcoin
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Ethereum
    • NFT
  • Press Releases
  • Reviews
    • Exchanges
    • NFT Marketplaces
    • Wallets
  • Market Analysis
  • Contact Us

© 2026 AltcoinReporter. All rights reserved.