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07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
French authorities have charged 88 suspects, more than a dozen of them minors, across 12 investigations into organised criminal networks targeting cryptocurrency holders with kidnapping, extortion, and physical coercion. The arrests are the largest single enforcement action against crypto wrench attacks recorded in Europe.
France’s National Organized Crime Prosecutor’s Office (PNACO) confirmed that 75 of the 88 suspects have been placed in pre-trial detention as part of 12 ongoing investigations handled by specialized magistrates in Paris.
According to Vanessa Perrée, the charges span kidnapping, unlawful confinement, extortion, and money laundering offenses carried out by structured criminal groups.
The surge in Crypto Wrench Attacks reflects what officials describe as a systemic shift in criminal behavior. Instead of hacking wallets remotely, attackers are turning to physical coercion, forcing victims to hand over private keys and crypto holdings under threat of violence.
The data is stark. French authorities have recorded 135 crypto-related violent incidents since 2023, including 67 in 2025 and 47 already in 2026. This sharp rise places France at the center of the global surge in Crypto Wrench Attacks.
Recent arrests highlight the scale and coordination of these operations. In one case, three suspects aged between 25 and 30 were detained over a kidnapping in Challes-les-Eaux, while additional arrests followed in a related case in Dompierre-sur-Mer. All individuals involved have been placed in custody.

These incidents are not isolated. They form part of a broader pattern of Crypto Wrench Attacks that increasingly involve multiple actors, logistics planning, and cross-border coordination.
Globally, Crypto Wrench Attacks reached a record 72 incidents in 2025, marking a 75% increase year-over-year, according to blockchain security firm CertiK. Europe accounted for more than 40% of these cases, with France leading the region.
Jonathan Riss noted that the structure of these crimes often shields those orchestrating them.
> “The masterminds are often based abroad, outside the EU and out of immediate reach of authorities, operating through local middlemen and young executors,” Riss said.
This layered approach makes Crypto Wrench Attacks particularly difficult to dismantle, as law enforcement typically apprehends only the operatives, not the organizers.
A critical factor behind the rise of Crypto Wrench Attacks is the growing availability of personal data. Riss pointed to France’s exposure to data breaches, including a major leak involving the national agency handling identity documents, which compromised the personal information of millions of citizens.
> “For a few thousand euros, civil servants have proven willing to resell highly valuable information,” he said.
This combination of leaked data and public social media activity creates a targeting pipeline for criminals. Victims are identified, profiled, and tracked before attacks are executed making Crypto Wrench Attacks more precise and more dangerous.
Despite rising numbers, experts believe Crypto Wrench Attacks are still underreported globally. Many incidents are categorized as standard robberies, with no distinction for crypto-related coercion. Others go unreported entirely, as victims fear retaliation or scrutiny over undeclared assets.
> “Not every country treats wrench attacks the same way,” Riss explained. “Some jurisdictions lack the legal framework or law enforcement training to categorize crypto-related coercion as a distinct crime.”
This inconsistency obscures the true scale of Crypto Wrench Attacks, particularly outside Europe.
The crackdown follows a series of high-profile Crypto Wrench Attacks that have rattled France’s crypto community.

Among them was the kidnapping and mutilation of Ledger co-founder David Balland, a case that drew international attention. Authorities also responded to a home invasion attempt targeting the head of Binance France, as well as the abduction of a magistrate and her mother in a ransom plot.
In another recent incident, a mother and her 11-year-old son were kidnapped in Burgundy and held overnight before being rescued by elite police units.
These cases underscore the human cost of Crypto Wrench Attacks, shifting the narrative from digital risk to physical danger.
The issue has also sparked debate around privacy and data security. Pavel Durov recently warned that increased demands for user data could worsen the problem.
> “More data, more leaks, more victims,” Durov wrote, referencing a case where a French tax official allegedly sold crypto holder data to criminals.
As regulators push for greater transparency, the unintended consequences could include heightened exposure to Crypto Wrench Attacks.
French prosecutors are urging crypto holders to take precautions, including limiting public exposure and remaining vigilant against phishing attempts and impersonation schemes.

Authorities have also ramped up coordination between agencies, recognizing that Crypto Wrench Attacks require a hybrid response combining cyber intelligence and traditional policing. Still, officials acknowledge that enforcement alone may not be enough to curb the trend.
The surge in Crypto Wrench Attacks marks a critical shift in the risk landscape for digital asset holders.
As crypto adoption grows, so too does the incentive for criminals to bypass technical barriers and target individuals directly. France’s crackdown is a significant step, but it also highlights a broader reality: the threat is evolving faster than the systems designed to stop it.
Until security extends beyond wallets and into personal safety, Crypto Wrench Attacks will remain one of the most urgent and unsettling challenges in the crypto ecosystem.