France Faces Surge in Crypto Investors Kidnapping after Tax Data Leaks
Kidnappings and violent assaults targeting crypto investors in France have climbed sharply, driven by organised gangs allegedly using leaked tax data to identify wealthy holders.
Telegram founder Pavel Durov attributed a sharp rise in crypto-related kidnappings in France to leaks of tax data allegedly sold by a former tax official.
In a post on X, Durov highlighted the severity of the issue, citing 41 reported kidnappings of crypto investors in France since the beginning of 2026, averaging one incident every 2.5 days.
French prosecutors report over 100 crypto-linked kidnappings since 2023, with dozens already in 2026, showing a sustained pattern of targeted crime.
Criminals appear to use leaked tax and personal data, plus victims’ public crypto exposure, to select targets, leading to brutal “wrench attacks” and home invasions.
Authorities have opened multiple cases, charged around 88 suspects, and promised new protections for investors, but individuals still need to harden both privacy and physical security.
France’s anti organized crime office reports more than 100 crypto related kidnappings in the last three years, with roughly 135 incidents since 2023 and about mid forties already in 2026.
Recent coverage cites over 100 crypto related kidnappings and describes a “defined criminal network,” including repeat offenders involved in multimillion euro extortions.
A CoinMarketCap community report notes about 41 abducted crypto investors since January 2026 alone, averaging one case every 60 hours, which aligns with the surge described by French prosecutors.
Victims range from influencers’ relatives to founders and executives at crypto companies. These are not online scams but physical kidnappings, beatings, and forced transfers of large sums in crypto or euros under duress.
Durov claims kidnappers are exploiting leaked French tax data that reveals who holds significant crypto, even naming a former tax employee accused of selling sensitive records to organized crime.
He argues that “more data equals more victims” and has threatened to withdraw Telegram from France rather than weaken encryption.
These gangs also exploit public signals. High profile crypto lifestyles, public on chain wealth, or doxxed holdings make it easier to identify lucrative targets. French media describe “crypto rapt,” where victims are sequestrated and tortured until they transfer assets, including one case where a couple was forced to send 8 million euros.
Crypto wealth creates an additional layer of physical personal risk, especially when identity, address, and holdings can be linked together offline.
French authorities are responding with coordinated investigations. The national anti organized crime office reports 12 active legal cases involving 88 defendants, with most suspects in pre trial detention, indicating a serious crackdown on the networks behind these attacks.
At Paris Blockchain Week, minister delegate Jean Didier Berger acknowledged the rise in violent wrench attacks and announced forthcoming preventative measures to protect crypto users, while investigators like ZachXBT and exchange security teams have already helped recover ransom funds in at least one case.
For individual investors, the pattern underlines the need to treat crypto like any high value asset: minimize public disclosure of holdings, separate identity from large wallets, and think about physical security and custody choices, not just price risk.
France’s surge in crypto investor kidnappings ties together three forces: visible crypto wealth, leaked or over collected personal data, and organized crime willing to use violence to extract keys or transfers.
Law enforcement is ramping up prosecutions and policy responses, but for anyone with meaningful on chain exposure, the key shift is recognising that “risk” now includes real world personal safety, not only market volatility or smart contract bugs.

