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Federal authorities have charged 12 additional individuals in a $263 million crypto racketeering scheme and money laundering operation, employing cyberattacks and physical break-ins to target wealthy crypto holders, with proceeds fueling extravagant lifestyles.
A Global Crypto Crime Ring Uncovered
On May 15, 2025, U.S. federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., unveiled a superseding indictment charging 12 more suspects in a massive $263 million cryptocurrency racketeering scheme, building on earlier charges against 20-year-old Singaporean Malone Lam.
The operation, active since October 2023, allegedly involved a network of U.S. and foreign nationals who met through online gaming platforms, using sophisticated hacking, social engineering, and even violent home invasions to steal digital assets. A prominent case saw Lam and accomplices steal over 4,100 Bitcoin, valued at $230 million, from a victim identified as a creditor of the defunct Genesis crypto exchange on August 18, 2024.
The group laundered funds through cryptocurrency mixers, peel chains, and fake identities, though blockchain investigator ZachXBT and federal authorities traced their activities, leading to arrests in California and ongoing pursuits in Dubai.
This case coincides with heightened concerns about crypto-related crime, as evidenced by a recent Coinbase security breach disclosed on May 15, 2025, where hackers bribed overseas support agents to steal personal data from less than 1% of users, roughly 97,000 customers.
Such incidents highlight vulnerabilities in centralized exchanges, with blockchain sleuth ZachXBT linking the Coinbase breach to social engineering scams that stole over $45 million from users in early May 2025.
Physical Threats and Ongoing Criminal Activities
The racketeering scheme’s physical dimension, including a July 2024 home break-in in New Mexico to steal a hardware wallet, mirrors a disturbing trend of violence targeting crypto wealth.
In Europe, at least four kidnappings or attempted abductions of crypto millionaires have been reported over the past six months in France, Spain, and Belgium, often involving extreme violence like torture and mutilation. A high-profile case in Paris saw a crypto entrepreneur’s father abducted, with his finger severed to extort a €5-7 million ransom, while French police rescued the victim and arrested five suspects.
These incidents, coupled with the Coinbase breach exposing user addresses and balances, have driven crypto millionaires to hire private security, treating personal protection as essential as cold storage wallets.
The stolen funds fueled lavish spending, with $9 million on exotic cars, $4 million on nightclub services, and millions more on luxury goods like a $2 million watch and private jets. Even from detention, Lam allegedly continued orchestrating the scheme, underscoring the challenges of combating decentralized, tech-savvy crime networks.
As the crypto industry grows, with $2.2 billion in losses from hacks in 2024 alone, these cases signal a need for stronger security measures and international cooperation to protect digital asset holders.
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