Crypto holders in France are being violently targeted again — and it’s no longer just insiders


A French couple held at knifepoint in their home near Versailles and forced to transfer roughly €900,000 in Bitcoin would normally read like a rare, tragic story.

But in France, it now fits a pattern serious enough to rattle the industry, draw the interior minister into the fray, and push executives toward bodyguards and tighter personal security measures.

This signals a broader trend: crypto security is becoming a key concern for physical security.

The March 2026 Le Chesnay-Rocquencourt case, in which three men posing as police allegedly coerced the couple into authorizing the transfer, is the latest data point in what French authorities now call a “new criminal phenomenon.”

In January 2026, the Interior Ministry said that “the threat is evolving and now affects private individuals.”

That language marks a shift: crypto crime in France is no longer just a specialist cyber issue, but a personal protection problem requiring high-end policing.

The pattern became unmistakable in 2025. Ledger co-founder David Balland and his partner were kidnapped in January, and a crypto ransom was demanded.

Reuters later reported that Balland’s hand was mutilated, and part of the ransom was paid before investigators recovered it.

In May, the father of a wealthy crypto entrepreneur was abducted and had a finger severed. Days later, a masked gang attempted to kidnap the daughter of Paymium CEO Pierre Noizat in broad daylight in Paris.

By the end of May, 25 people were being brought before an investigating judge over the attempted abduction and criminal conspiracy. In June, authorities arrested a suspect in Morocco tied to the French crypto sector kidnappings.

The 2026 attacks kept coming. In early February, a magistrate and her mother were abducted, with investigators focusing on the judge’s partner’s crypto ties. The Le Chesnay robbery followed weeks later.

France’s crypto crime wave moved from niche incidents to a pattern of kidnappings, mutilations, and home invasions between January 2025 and March 2026.

What makes France editorially important is that it is producing enough cases to reveal the structural problem: self-custody protects against exchange collapse and platform risk, but it does not eliminate the risk of coercion.

CertiK’s February 2026 wrench attack report documented 72 verified physical coercion incidents globally in 2025, up 75% year over year. Kidnapping was the primary attack vector. Physical assaults rose 250%.

Europe accounted for over 40% of cases, and France led the world. The report explicitly calls physical violence a “structural threat to digital asset ownership.” That is no longer anecdotal.

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Bitcoin’s problem is key coercion

France is stress testing one of crypto’s founding promises. “Be your own bank” solved dependence on trusted intermediaries. It did not solve the wrench attack.

Hardware wallets can reduce the risk of remote compromise, yet they cannot stop a knife at the door. The French state’s own advice now reflects that reality.

In January 2026, it told holders not to display gains online, not to discuss holdings offline, to use strong authentication, and to consider delays for unlocking large amounts. That is the vocabulary of hostage risk mitigation.

The tension is that France also wants to be seen as a serious crypto jurisdiction.

Reports from March 2025 noted that state-backed lender Bpifrance was launching a crypto token fund to support French projects. At the same time, AP said the wave of kidnappings was denting France’s image as a welcoming place for innovation.

France wants to be a crypto hub, but it is becoming the place where crypto wealth looks hardest to hold safely in public.

Bruno Retailleau, the interior minister, met crypto leaders in May 2025 and offered priority access to emergency police services, home security checks, and briefings from elite police units, including GIGN, RAID, and BRI.

The meeting was kept confidential enough that journalists were told not to film participants “for reasons of security.” That level of response does not get deployed for phishing campaigns. France is treating crypto crime as an executive protection problem.

The broader implication is that the security model around Bitcoin and self-custody is being redesigned in real time.

Multisig, geographic separation of keys, delayed spending controls, distributed approvals, and wealthy holders’ willingness to mix self-custody with institutional custody are all responses to the same underlying fact: private keys can be hardened against hackers, but not against violence, family targeting, or face-to-face extortion.

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The privacy debate no one resolved

One unresolved tension is the possibility that greater visibility makes holders safer or more vulnerable.

Paymium explicitly criticized European reporting requirements after the May attempted kidnapping. However, the French Interior Ministry pushes the opposite message: blockchain is traceable, funds can be confiscated, and since 2014, French magistrates have seized €90 million in crypto assets.

Nevertheless, it isn’t clear if more traceability deters criminals through enforcement or exposes holders through paper trails.

Issue Why it could improve safety Why it could increase vulnerability
Blockchain traceability Stolen funds can be tracked and, in some cases, seized by authorities Criminals may still rely on speed and coercion before tracing becomes useful
KYC / reporting rules Gives investigators more data to map networks and pursue suspects Creates paper trails that may help identify wealthy targets
Public founder visibility Builds credibility, attracts investors, and supports business development Makes individuals and families easier to identify and map
Social media / wallet flexing Can signal success and attract community attention Can expose holdings, routines, lifestyle cues, and possible addresses
Institutional transparency Helps compliance and law-enforcement coordination May widen the attack surface for organized criminals looking for visible targets
Retail holder exposure Can normalize safer practices and awareness Can reveal that ordinary holders, not just executives, are worth targeting

The answer likely depends on which type of actor investors are worried about.

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