Earlier this month, in a leafy suburb of Paris, a young woman and her toddler daughter were violently attacked and nearly abducted.

The alleged motive? Her family’s cryptocurrency fortune. In a chilling new reality, digital wealth is no longer just vulnerable to hackers—it’s putting lives on the line in the physical world.

Crypto owners are being kidnapped, tortured, and extorted across the globe. From France and India to Latin America and Nigeria, these incidents are rising with alarming frequency as criminals adapt their tactics to pursue a new high-value target: anyone visibly successful in the digital asset space.

Crypto is providing criminals with a new type of target

Crypto’s allure has always been its promise of autonomy, borderless wealth, and anonymity. However, that autonomy is becoming a liability for individuals who have struck it big. Unlike a bank account that requires bureaucratic steps to access, crypto wallets can be emptied in minutes—under duress.

Michael Lyons, an anti-money laundering attorney at Clifford Chance, concurs. He holds, “Crypto transactions are more likely to escape the level of scrutiny applied to traditional banking systems.” 

In India, a Bengaluru businessman was lured to Lucknow under the pretext of a business deal, only to be kidnapped and held for a ransom of 10 million rupees. In Latin America, kidnapping crews with cartel ties have begun demanding ransom not in cash but in Bitcoin, often using privacy-enhanced coins like Monero to mask their tracks.

One Venezuelan crypto trader, who asked not to be named, described being tailed for weeks before armed men intercepted him outside a mall. “They knew what I drove, where I lived, even which exchange I used,” he said. “They held my family until I transferred the funds.”

Kidnappers have gone digital

The rules of engagement have shifted. Where old-school ransom schemes might involve anonymous wire transfers or suitcases of cash, today’s criminal outfits are leveraging the technologies that gave rise to crypto: decentralization, pseudonymity, and global reach.

According to a report by BankInfoSecurity, criminals are increasingly demanding ransom in Monero and other privacy coins because they are harder to trace than Bitcoin. “The privacy coins make the laundering process easier for them, so they obviously prefer it, but they will still accept BTC,” said a cybercrime analyst quoted in the article.

In some instances, criminals are no longer waiting for the wealthy to become careless. They’re using facial recognition, blockchain transaction tracking tools, and even SIM swapping attacks to isolate targets. The lines between cybercrime and street-level violence have blurred.

The Interpol has also reported increased coordination between cybercrime units and traditional law enforcement as crypto crimes cross national borders. These cases have created a new breed of hybrid criminals employing a mix of digital sophistication and brutal coercion to their nefarious ends. 

The crypto industry is taking notice

Security, once an afterthought in the fast-moving world of crypto, has become a front-and-center concern. Executives and influencers are hiring private security firms, sometimes staffed with former intelligence operatives. High-net-worth individuals are relocating, installing panic buttons, and switching to encrypted communications.

Amid a spate of kidnappings and the Coinbase hack, increasingly large crypto holders are hiring private security firms.

Some investors have opted for a lower profile. They now conduct meetings virtually, scrub their social media of luxury photos, and use pseudonyms even within crypto communities. This stance is a far cry from the early days of crypto culture—where flexing wealth was part of the brand. Today, discretion is survival.

Meanwhile, exchanges and wallet providers are reevaluating their user education practices. Physical security awareness campaigns now supplement tutorials on setting up hardware wallets and using multi-signature authentication.

All these initiatives show that while a user’s seed phrase is important, so is their situational awareness. Combating crypto crime requires understanding that air-gapping your wallet is unhelpful if you broadcast your wealth through social media and other means.

Law enforcement is playing catch-up

While the threats are global, the responses have been fragmented. Law enforcement agencies often lack the technical know-how to investigate crimes involving digital assets. Jurisdictional challenges complicate matters: when a ransom is paid in France and funneled through wallets in Panama, who has authority?

Some progress is being made. INTERPOL has launched a Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption Centre to address transnational financial threats, including crypto-related ones. However, international coordination remains a major hurdle. 

In the U.S., the Department of Justice has stepped up crypto training for its cybercrime units and partnered with blockchain analytics firms to trace illicit transactions. However, experts say the lag between policy formulation and technological evolution is widening.

There is also debate about whether crypto platforms should shoulder more responsibility. Some argue exchanges need to implement AI-driven behavior detection systems that could flag suspicious patterns before funds are forcibly withdrawn.

Yet privacy advocates caution against sweeping surveillance in the name of safety. They argue that we can’t sacrifice decentralization and privacy entirely to police bad actors. So, we must find ways of achieving that difficult balance.

Crypto must address its cultural problem

Beyond policy and policing lies a deeper cultural issue: the glamorization of sudden wealth. Crypto communities on YouTube, Instagram, and X (formerly Twitter) are rife with images of Lamborghini, luxury watches, and high-rise living. This culture of conspicuous consumption has painted targets on the backs of newcomers and veterans alike.

Some of the most at-risk individuals are early adopters who experienced 1000x returns overnight. Many are young, inexperienced with wealth, and unaware of the attention they’re attracting.

To these investors, the rising number of crypto kidnappings shouldn’t just be another crime wave. Rather, it’s a wake-up call. They must understand that their success stories must come with robust identity protection, not flaunting their assets and always assuming someone’s watching them. 

What’s the way forward?

As the crypto industry matures, so too must the systems around it. That means that investors need to take personal security as seriously as they take portfolio diversification.

Platforms and exchanges should include user education on physical safety, not just cyber hygiene. Furthermore, law enforcement agencies need cross-border frameworks and technical expertise to respond effectively.

But beyond systems and policy, a cultural shift is needed. We must move away from the glamorization of sudden wealth and toward a culture of security-minded, privacy-conscious engagement with digital finance.

Cryptocurrency has opened the door to financial freedom for millions. But freedom, in this case, comes with a price—and for too many, that price is proving far too high.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

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