French Police Investigate Cryptocurrency Kidnap After Man Rescued

Seven people were arrested after the father of a cryptocurrency investor was abducted in Paris on May 1 and held for two days before being rescued.
French Police Investigate Cryptocurrency Kidnap After Man Rescued
A price chart on the Bybit website for the cryptocurrency Ethereum on a computer screen in New York City on Feb. 21, 2025. Patrick Sison/AP Photo
Chris Summers
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French prosecutors are investigating the kidnapping of a cryptocurrency investor’s father—who has not been named—after he was rescued by police near Paris on May 3.

Seven people have been arrested in connection with the incident.

French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau wrote on social media platform X on Saturday, “A huge congratulations to the investigators who did an exceptional job freeing this man and arresting his captors.”

In a statement published on May 4, the Paris prosecutor’s office said, “The victim turned out to be the father of a man who made his fortune in cryptocurrencies, and the incident was accompanied by a ransom demand.”

The prosecutor’s office said the man was abducted on the morning of May 1 and held for two days before he was rescued by police from a house in the Essonne region, south of Paris.

Four people were arrested in or near the house, and a fifth was arrested in a car, the prosecutor’s office said.

Two others were arrested on Sunday.

The incident appears to be the latest criminal attempt to extort people who possess digital assets.

In January, the prosecutor’s office said kidnappers mutilated the hand of David Balland, the co-founder of cryptocurrency firm Ledger, during another abduction and ransom demand incident.

In the latest incident, the prosecutor’s office said the abductee was treated for his injuries, giving no further details, amid reports in the French media that one of his fingers had been cut off.

The prosecutor’s office said that those arrested would face a number of criminal charges, including kidnapping involving “torture or a barbaric act.”

On May 5, Fabrice Gardon, the director of the judicial police, confirmed to radio station RTL that the victim had indeed had one of his fingers cut off.

Gardon said the assailants, who were wearing balaclavas, struck on Thursday morning, bundling the victim into a van as he left his home in Paris to walk his dog.

Bystanders alerted the police, who launched an investigation.

Gardon told RTL that the gang sent a video to the man’s son showing the mutilation the father had suffered and another video showing him tied up. They then demanded several million euros in ransom.

‘New Ultimatum’ From Kidnappers

The police chief said his team reached the house in Essonne on Saturday night.

“We got there a few minutes before a new ultimatum where the victim might again have suffered another mutilation.”

Gardon said he waited at his unit’s headquarters in Paris until he heard the rescue team, from the police’s Search and Intervention Brigade (BRI), give the codeword “jackpot,” signalling the abductee had been recovered safely.

“Obviously, it was a big relief,” he told RTL.

In the January incident, Balland and his wife were abducted from their home in the Cher region, in central France.

Police said the kidnappers had demanded a cryptocurrency ransom from Balland’s colleague, another of Ledger’s co-founders.

But Balland was rescued by France’s National Gendarmerie Intervention Group (GIGN) unit, which is highly trained in hostage situations. His wife was freed the following day, after being tied up in a vehicle.

In November 2024, Dean Skurka, the CEO of Toronto-based cryptocurrency firm WonderFi, was kidnapped and then released after paying a $1 million ransom.

In 2022, Aiden Pleterski, the self-proclaimed “Crypto King,” was kidnapped at gunpoint in downtown Toronto, beaten, and held captive for three days.

At the time, he was facing accusations of running a Ponzi scheme, defrauding investors of up to $40 million. Pleterski was arrested in May 2024 and charged with fraud over $5,000 and laundering the proceeds of crime.

In recent years, cyber scammers have increased the number of cryptocurrency frauds they carry out on unsuspecting investors, often individuals who lose their whole life savings.

Chinese organized crime runs industrial-scale cyber scamming hubs in Burma, Cambodia, and Laos, which have swindled individuals in the United States out of millions of dollars.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Chris Summers
Chris Summers
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Chris Summers is a UK-based journalist covering a wide range of national stories, with a particular interest in crime, policing and the law.