logo
Inside France's brutal crypto crime wave with chopped off fingers, delivery van street kidnaps & £10million ransoms

Inside France's brutal crypto crime wave with chopped off fingers, delivery van street kidnaps & £10million ransoms

The Irish Sun14-05-2025
FRANCE is facing a wave of cryptocurrency kidnappings with victims snatched off the street in daylight and being returned with gruesome injuries such as chopped off fingers.
Police sources told The Sun they are probing if these shocking cases - with at least four terrifying kidnappings or snatch attacks - are the "latest fad" for organised crime.
6
Many of the attackers have used unassuming looking vans to target their victims
Credit: LeParisien
6
Harrowing footage shows three men, whose faces were covered, trying to force a mother into a van at around 8:20 a.m
Credit: LeParisien
6
The woman was helped by a passerby, who intervened to stop the assailants
Credit: LeParisien
6
Shocking abductions have seen assailants
target
both people working in the crypto industry and their loved ones over the past few month
It has sparked an urgent investigation from French law enforcement.
These horrifying abductions have seen millions in euros of ransoms demanded - and even some victims mutilated in the process.
Attacks can happen in a split second, with one video capturing an attempted attack by masked men in a delivery van.
read more in world news
Such is the scale of the trend that French officials have vowed to take action to protect French officials and their families.
Victims have been tied up, doused with petrol and more than one case had their fingers chopped off as part of a ransom demand.
"There are certainly possible links between the suspects involved,' an investigating source in Paris told The Sun.
"Crypto kidnaps are becoming the latest fad in organised crime, and the robbers are becoming more ambitious.
Most read in The US Sun
"The crypto industry is worth billions, and the coins are exceptionally easy to move between individuals, while avoiding any third party, such as a bank.'
"All Bitcoin transactions are recorded on a blockchain, but law and order officials do not have the same powers to investigate transactions as they would with regular financial exchanges."
French riot police 'tear gas entire streets' as fans 'throw fireworks' in chaotic scenes before PSG vs Arsenal
And experts told The Sun that the more furtive nature of cryptocurrency makes it appealing to potential hostage-takers looking to claim ransom money.
The law enforcement source spoke to The Sun after a stunning attempted abduction on the streets of Paris yesterday, where a woman who is believed to be the daughter or a crypto tycoon was targeted by three masked men.
This
The 34-year-old, along with her young child, was reportedly attacked at around 8.20am local time yesterday, when the men attempted to snatch her off the street into a delivery van.
One of the greatest risks that's beginning to emerge are individuals that are prominent within the crypto space
Will Geddes
security expert
However, she was saved by the intervention of a passerby, while the father of the child covered her during the horrifying attack.
She has since been identified as the daughter of Pierre Noizat, co-founder of the dealing platform Paymium.
Police in the French capital believe that the intention was to take the victims to a secret location, before the thugs sent a ransom demand to Mr Noizat.
He has one of the highest profiles in the crypto industry, saying in an interview in 2021 that some companies were worth billions, while others wanted to "conquer the world".
Mr Noizat said at the time: "Our competitors raised considerable funds, amounting to billions—a thousand times more than us —making Paymium dwarfed by these behemoths.
"But that's the story of technology in France: it's sometimes very difficult to obtain funding to conquer the world."
6
French gendarmes stand alert on a street in Mereau, near Vierzon, after the a crypto kidnap in January
Credit: AFP
6
France's Minister of the Interior Bruno Retailleau vowed to protect crypto investors
Credit: AFP
The dangers of crypto investing
These incidents are just part of a spate of attacks targeting people of profile in the crypto world.
Individuals with profile in the industry have been attacked by gangs looking to exploit its relative furtiveness.
Criminal gangs might take family members hostage in order to blackmail people with crypto investments for large sums of money.
Security expert Will Geddes told The Sun: "One of the greatest risks that's beginning to emerge are individuals that are prominent within the crypto space."
The latest incident involving the Noizat
family
adds to a string of violent crimes targeting crypto-affiliated individuals or their families – in France and other parts of the world.
Security expert Will Geddes told The Sun: "One of the greatest risks that's beginning to emerge are individuals that are prominent within the crypto space."
He added that they are "ultimately ending up being targeted by organised crime and low level criminals that are seeking opportunity that they can then acquire and rob them of significant amounts of funds that they can then funnel into their criminal activities and utilise in various different ways."
Crypto expert Professor Carol Alexander of the University of Sussex told The Sun: "I don't think the kidnappers are very clever.
"It used to be the dark web and the silk road - and bitcoin was used for
money
laundering.
"But nowadays, the FBI and the Department of Justice... the forensic software you can use to trace them is to good, the kidnappers would likely be very quickly found out."
France
alone has now experienced seven such crimes in 2025.
One particularly shocking incident saw a 60-year-old man have his finger cut off by attackers who demanded son - a crypto millionaire - pay a €5-7 million ransom.
He was snatched off the street in broad daylight and held for more than two days in a Paris suburb by the assailants.
The victim was eventually rescued by French cops, while four suspects were arrested.
French prosecutors said he 'appears to be the father of a man who made his fortune in cryptocurrencies, with the
crime
involving a ransom demand.'
Mutilation of victims is an established trend in this spate of kidnappings.
David Balland, a co-founder of French crypto firm Ledger, was abducted at his own home in central France along with his wife in January.
They were then taken by car to two separate addresses where they were held, according to prosecutors.
Balland was reportedly taken to an address in the central French town of Châteauroux, while his wife was found in Paris.
Criminals are said to have demanded a €10 million ransom, but they were later rescued by police.
Balland's hand had also been mutilated, according to reports - while his wife was found tied up but uninjured.
Elsewhere, a 56-year-old father of a Dubai-based influencer was found alive in a car boot in Normandy after being the target of an alleged kidnapping.
His son received a ransom demand and contacted the police about the incident.
The victim was found tied up, having been beaten and sprayed with petrol, 24 hours later.
Interior Minister
Bruno Retailleau has vowed to take action after the swathe of kidnap attempts.
"I will bring together cryptocurrency entrepreneurs in Beauvau to work with them on their safety and to make them aware of the risks," the minister told CNews/Europe 1.
Retailleau added: "We must jointly take measures to protect them.
"But we will also find the perpetrators wherever they may be, perhaps even abroad."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Small boat migrant found dead riddled with bullets on French coast after being gunned down ‘by people smugglers'
Small boat migrant found dead riddled with bullets on French coast after being gunned down ‘by people smugglers'

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Small boat migrant found dead riddled with bullets on French coast after being gunned down ‘by people smugglers'

A SMALL boat migrant has been found dead after being shot seven times by suspected people smugglers - with a murder enquiry launched. The deceased man - in his late teens or early 20s – is the latest victim of a surge of shootings around a camp at Loon-Plage, on the outskirts of Dunkirk. 3 Migrants hoping to reach the UK by small boat clash with police Credit: Chris Eades 3 Police fought battles with migrants trying to board small boats at Dunkirk Credit: Chris Eades 3 French police officers puncture a smuggler's boat with a knife to prevent migrants from embarking Credit: AFP Investigating sources revealed on Monday: "He was hit by seven bullets. "The camp was full of people hoping to get to Britain, when he was confronted by gunmen. "Around twenty bullets were fired in all, and seven entered the man's body." The source added how emergency service workers were at the scene but tragically couldn't save him. read more news The Dunkirk prosecutor visited the crime scene, which on Monday was blocked off, and surrounded by armed police. The hunt was meanwhile launched for the "suspected people smugglers" responsible for murder, said the source. It was the latest in a long list of heinous shootings around Loon-Plage beach, from where small inflatable boats with migrants onboard regularly set off for Britain. In June, a Sudanese man was shot dead and a mother-and-child wounded by suspected people smugglers the same camp. Most read in The Sun The horrific bloodbath unfolded when a gang opened fire on specific targets, while hitting passers-by. Two males – a man and a 17-year-old minor connected to a people smuggling gang – were then arrested, and face charges of "murder by an organised gang' and "attempted murder by an organised gang." There were also charges related to possession of a range of weapons, believed to include pistols and rifles. Migrant hotel protesters take to the streets again as demonstrations spread across the country in weekend stand-off Beyond the dead Sudanese man, three other men were seriously wounded and taken to hospital in Dunkirk. All of the violence is said to be linked to people smugglers "settling scores" against those who do not pay them. The cost of a single voyage to Britain in a small boat is now as much as £1500 cash. In December, a gun enthusiast was charged with the murders of five men including UK-bound migrants around Loon Plage. Frenchman Paul Domis, 22, was remanded in custody after confessing to a lethal shooting spree in the area. During less than an hour of intense violence, Domis allegedly targeted three former colleagues, and two Iraqi-Kurds who had intended to get to Britain on small boats. Charlotte Huet, the Dunkirk prosecutor, said Domis faced 'life in prison' for 'three targetted assassinations' of men he knew, and two further charges of 'murder' of the migrants. Domis will be remanded in custody until a quintuple murder trial is held later this year, or in 2026. The Loon-Plage camp is an illegal one, but growing everyday as migrants from all over the world arrive. In the first half of this year, some 20,000 migrants crossed the English Channel to the UK, up almost 50 per cent on the corresponding period last year. Numbers of what the British government calls "irregular migrants" keep rising, with 638 arriving on the coast of England in the seven days to last Friday. Bruno Retailleau, France's Interior Minister, regularly pledges tougher action against the highly organised smuggling guns operating in northern France. He said: "Our government will intensify the fight against these mafias who are getting rich by organising these crossings of death."

At least six dead in horror mass shooting after gunman opens fire at Bangkok market
At least six dead in horror mass shooting after gunman opens fire at Bangkok market

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

At least six dead in horror mass shooting after gunman opens fire at Bangkok market

AT least six people have been killed after a gunman opened fire near a busy food market in Thailand. Thai police have launched an investigation after several shots rang out near the Or Tor Kor market in Bangkok. Advertisement 2 Apparent video shows the shooter who opened fire at or near Or Tor Kor Market Credit: X 2 SIx people have been killed after a gunman opened fire near Or Tor Kor Market (stock image) Credit: Google Worapat Sukthai, deputy police chief of Bangkok's Bang Sue district, said: "Police are investigating the motive. So far, it's a mass shooting." Police said they were working to identify the shooter, as well as investigating "for any possible link" to the current border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia. Authorities say the shooter took his own life. The victims of the mass shooting include security guards and market vendors, according to local media. Advertisement Or Tor Kor Market is a major tourist destination in Bangkok, filled with visitors every weekend. More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos . Like us on Facebook at Advertisement Most read in The US Sun Live Blog

Ian Bailey's ex to open up on who she thinks murdered Sophie Toscan du Plantier
Ian Bailey's ex to open up on who she thinks murdered Sophie Toscan du Plantier

Irish Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Ian Bailey's ex to open up on who she thinks murdered Sophie Toscan du Plantier

Ian Bailey's former lover believes she knows who murdered Sophie Toscan du Plantier in a new book. Jules Thomas, whose ex was long considered a suspect in the brutal killing in December 1996, is writing her autobiography as she battles a life-threatening blood disease. While she and Mr Bailey were no longer a couple when he died last year, she told how the crime ruined their lives and she will never forgive the gardai for how they treated them. Although Ms Thomas, who is a painter, didn't name names, she said the killer is someone well connected with the forces of law and order. She also believes the culprit was involved in a relationship with the tragic French film producer who was battered to death, just 100 yards from her holiday home in Schull, Co Cork. Ms Thomas said: "I will tell my side of the story in this book. I want to get the truth out there while I am alive. "Ian Bailey may have been a lot of things but he did not kill Sophie. "He didn't have it in him to kill anyone – he couldn't kill a turkey for God's sake." Ian Bailey arrives at the Criminal Courts of Justice in Dublin with his partner Jules Thomas (Image: Collins Courts) The artist was Mr Bailey's alibi on the night Sophie was killed and detectives were hoping she would change her story after they split up three years ago. But she was having none of it. She recalled: "When gardai brought me in for questioning all those years ago they kept telling me my life was in danger and Ian would eventually kill me. Well here we are all these years later and guess what? Ian didn't kill me. "He has passed on and I am still here. He was never a danger to me or anyone else. Gardai, as far as I am concerned, tried to frame Ian for the murder and in doing so ruined our lives. "They never seriously looked at any other suspects. "In this book I will tell what actually went on and put the record straight. "Gardai did everything to get me to change my story but the truth is the truth. I kept telling them Ian did not kill Sophie but they wouldn't listen." Sophie Toscan du Plantier (Image: PATRICK ZIMMERMANN/AFP via Getty Images) Mr Bailey was arrested twice over the murder but never charged. He was then convicted in absentia by a French court of murder and sentenced to 25 years jail. But Irish authorities refused to extradite him because much of the evidence was based on hearsay and would never have been admissible in an Irish court. Ms Thomas' comments come as US forensic experts are using new technology to try and identify DNA from a blood sample found on the block used to kill Sophie. Her family in Paris are hoping for a breakthrough and are adamant the biological material will be that of Mr Bailey, who died of a heart attack. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store