$BTC

In December, someone decided to move $11,400 worth of Bitcoin ($BTC) into a new cold wallet for extra security ahead of the new year.

They bought a hardware wallet from an online store that claimed to be an official reseller — professional website, great reviews, even a small "holiday discount."

The device arrived sealed, looking brand new. They set it up, transferred their Bitcoin, and felt good about finally having complete control over their crypto.

Fast forward two weeks — they randomly checked their wallet to see Bitcoin's price pump... and found their entire balance wiped out. No alerts. No warnings. Just an empty address.

Turns out, the hardware wallet was preloaded with a compromised seed phrase.

When they “set it up,” they were actually activating a wallet that the scammer already had access to.

By the time they contacted Ledger’s official support and blockchain tracking teams, the Bitcoin had been split into dozens of smaller transactions, laundered through mixers, and was essentially untraceable.

Right now, they’re working with authorities, but chances of recovery are almost zero.

Key Lesson:

Only buy hardware wallets directly from official websites.

Never trust a device that’s already been “initialized.”

When it comes to security, paranoia is your friend.

Crypto doesn’t forgive mistakes. Stay sharp.

Have you ever been scammed or nearly scammed in crypto? Let’s talk about it below.

Maybe your story can save someone else.

#CryptoSecurity #Bitcoin #CryptoScams #StayAlert #ColdWallets #CryptoLessons