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There's a case that has been lingering in my mind. In August 2024, a group of young people carried out one of the boldest robberies in crypto history, and the sophistication of the entire process was a bit chilling.
The protagonist is Malone Lam, who was only 20 years old at the time, along with his accomplices Veer Chetal, Jeandiel Serrano, Danish Khan, and Chen. Their goal was very clear: a creditor of Genesis, holding thousands of bitcoins.
The entire operation was remarkably professional. First, someone impersonated Google customer service, calling the victim and convincing them that their account was hacked, then gaining access to Gmail and iCloud. Next, another person pretended to be a Gemini staff member, telling the victim that their exchange account was under attack. The victim panicked and followed instructions to reset two-factor authentication. This seemingly simple step directly gave these people full control over the Gemini account. Finally, they tricked the victim into installing AnyDesk remote software. The screen was exposed, and the private keys were revealed. 4,064 bitcoins were gone just like that.
At that time, the value was about $238 million, and a single transfer completely changed the game. These people then started laundering money frantically, dispersing the funds across 15 exchanges, converting into Litecoin, Ethereum, Monero to obfuscate traces.
Malone Lam completely let loose. He spent half a million dollars in one night at nightclubs, bought a $10.5 million mansion in Miami. Supercars filled the garage. He bought five Hermès Birkin bags at once, then casually gave them to strangers at nightclubs. He even bought a pink Lamborghini Urus for his ex-girlfriend in an attempt to win her back, but was rejected. This guy was just straightforwardly showing off his wealth, but also exposing himself.
On September 19, 2024, federal agents raided his Miami mansion. Malone Lam was handcuffed and taken away. Now, the entire team has been arrested, each facing decades of federal imprisonment.
The most heartbreaking part is that out of the $238 million worth of Bitcoin, only $9 million has been recovered so far. The rest is still hidden in various wallets and exchanges. Think about it—if this money had been held until now, at current BTC prices, it would be worth $468 million. These people could have quietly made a fortune, but their desire to show off led them to prison instead.
What does this case tell us? First, the liquidity of crypto assets is indeed very strong, but because of that, any small mistake can lead to catastrophic consequences. Second, no matter how clever the technical methods are, they can't beat human greed and vanity. Malone Lam and his team’s problem wasn’t their hacking techniques but their inability to control their desire to flaunt. That’s also why many major cases are ultimately solved due to the perpetrators’ basic mistakes.