Key Takeaways:
- France’s anti-organized crime prosecutor charged 88 people, including over 10 minors, linked to 12 cryptocurrency kidnapping cases.
- More than 135 crypto kidnapping incidents have been recorded in France since 2023, with 41 attacks logged in 2026 at a rate of one every 2.5 days.
- Seventy-five of the 88 suspects are held in pretrial detention as prosecutors identify structured criminal networks operating across multiple cases.
From Isolated Cases to Organized Crime
France’s national anti-organized crime prosecutor announced the charges following an investigation that found repeat suspects across multiple incidents, concluding that structured criminal networks are actively recruiting participants and systematically targeting the families of known cryptocurrency holders.
Of the 88 people charged, more than 10 are minors, reflecting deep recruitment into younger demographics, while seventy-five suspects are currently held in pretrial detention. The 12 prosecuted cases represent a fraction of the broader problem where authorities have documented more than 135 crypto kidnapping incidents in France since 2023. In 2026 alone, 41 cases have been recorded through late April, roughly one every 2.5 days.
Escalation, Tactics, and Response
France now accounts for approximately 40% of all crypto-related ransom attacks in Europe, following a 75% global jump in such crimes in 2025. Attacks follow a consistent pattern where perpetrators abduct family members of cryptocurrency holders and hold victims for hours or days, demanding ransoms paid in digital assets. In two separate 2025 incidents, captors severed victims’ fingers before ransoms were paid, marking a clear escalation in coercive tactics.
In another high-profile case from 2026, operatives from France’s elite GIGN unit rescued a mother and her 10-year-old son held for approximately 20 hours while attackers attempted to extort several hundred thousand euros from the father, a crypto entrepreneur.
Prosecutors and security researchers have pointed to data leaks from cryptocurrency exchanges as a key enabler, allowing criminal networks to cross-reference leaked account data with public records and identify high-value targets before executing abductions. Telegram founder Pavel Durov cited such leaks as fueling the targeting of wealthy digital asset holders across Europe.

France’s Interior Ministry representative Jean-Didier Berger confirmed at Paris Blockchain Week that a “more stringent response plan,” developed with Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez, is set to be deployed in the coming weeks. A prevention platform aimed at digital asset holders has already been launched, drawing thousands of registrations.
Earlier this week, onchain investigator ZachXBT helped freeze $800,000 in ransom funds following the kidnapping of a French content creator’s father, with Binance’s security team tracing payments across the blockchain.













