A growing number of abductions and violent assaults tied to crypto holdings has raised alarm among industry participants in France, following another kidnapping earlier this week.
French authorities are investigating a string of recent incidents in which individuals connected to digital assets were targeted at their homes or in public.
Security specialists have described the crimes as an escalation of real-world threats linked to online wealth.
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Crypto Kidnappings Intensify
In the most recent case, police said assailants attacked a crypto investor and his family at their home in the Yvelines department late last week.
Several attackers entered the home after dark, restrained the occupants and inflicted physical violence before fleeing the area, French media reported.
Separately, investigators confirmed that an engineer was abducted from his home in western France earlier in the week, assaulted, and then released.
Authorities said the perpetrators appeared to be seeking access to digital assets.
They added that the victim’s family had previously reported suspicious activity near their property.
The incidents follow a series of similar crimes reported across the country over recent months, many involving kidnappings, beatings or home invasions.
Online Speculation
The recent wave of attacks has prompted speculation on social media about broader safety implications for the sector.
Some users on X said security concerns prompted organizers to cancel NFT Paris , one of Europe’s largest digital-asset events.
Organizers have not confirmed any link between the event’s cancellation and security risks.
Additionally, no official statement has attributed the decision to safety threats.
Nonetheless, the claims reflect growing unease within online crypto communities over the physical risks associated with public exposure.
Timeline of Reported Crypto Kidnappings in France
Recent cases reported by French media and authorities include:
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Jan. 6, 2026 — In Manosque (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence), attackers forced their way into a residence and confined a woman inside her home while attempting to obtain access to digital assets linked to her partner.
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Jan. 6, 2026 — A separate account from Manosque described masked intruders restraining a woman at gunpoint and leaving with a storage device believed to contain cryptocurrency credentials.
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Jan. 9, 2026 — An engineer was taken from his home in Saint-Léger-sous-Cholet (Maine-et-Loire) and later released following an assault, with investigators citing a suspected crypto-related motive.
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Jan. 9, 2026 — In Verneuil-sur-Seine (Yvelines), a household connected to cryptocurrency investment was overpowered inside their home, with family members restrained and injured during the attack.
Experts Warn of Sustained Increase
Security specialists say such attacks have become more frequent as criminals move beyond cybercrime and pursue direct physical coercion.
“There’s clearly been a rise in kidnappings aimed at cryptocurrency holders,” Steve Krystek, chief executive of security firm PFC Safeguards, told the New York Post.
“Individuals who openly display wealth or publicise their involvement in crypto can quickly become targets.”
Analysts say public-facing figures in the sector face heightened risk, as organized groups monitor social media, travel patterns and public records to identify potential victims.
The education team at CCN warned that the loss of privacy can turn digital wealth into a real-world liability.
“These cases show that crypto crime doesn’t stop online,” it said in a recent report. “When privacy fails, attacks shift to homes and families.”




































































































































































































