Just came across something pretty disturbing that's been happening in France lately. There's been a serious spike in crypto-related kidnapping cases, and authorities are now treating it as an organized crime pattern rather than isolated incidents.



So here's what's going on. Back in January, a 74-year-old guy from Isère got kidnapped for 16 hours by a group that forced him to contact his son while demanding cryptocurrency. They were convinced the family had major digital assets. The attackers were violent, filmed him to pressure the son into paying, and initially demanded €3 million. Three suspects aged 19-23 were arrested after police intervention, though no ransom was actually paid since the son didn't have significant crypto holdings.

What's concerning is that this wasn't an isolated case. Police investigation revealed the same operational pattern linked to at least 20 kidnappings between 2023 and 2025, with activity ramping up significantly in 2026. France has now recorded 41 crypto-related kidnapping cases since early this year alone.

The structure is pretty organized too. Investigators found that remote coordinators operating from abroad recruit lower-level operatives through social media to carry out the actual attacks locally. The groups use leaked databases and online intelligence to identify targets, studying public profiles and financial indicators. Interestingly, many victims don't even actually own cryptocurrency, but the attackers operate based on assumptions from data leaks.

This enforcement challenge exists because the pyramid structure means recruits rarely know their coordinators, making it hard to dismantle the networks. French authorities presented this at Paris Blockchain Week and launched a national response plan to tackle the kidnapping surge. They're focusing on prevention and better coordination between law enforcement agencies.

Insurance companies and security firms are also stepping in with new protection measures like kidnap-and-ransom coverage for digital asset holders. It's a wild situation that shows how attractive crypto makes people as targets, even when they don't actually have significant holdings.
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