Austrian police recently arrested two Ukrainian men suspected of torturing a 21-year-old university student, robbing him of his cryptocurrency, and ultimately killing and burning his body. The victim was identified as Danylo K., the son of the deputy mayor of Kharkiv, Ukraine. His burned remains were found in the back seat of a Mercedes. Police stated that the victim’s crypto wallet funds were completely withdrawn after the incident, with the motive strongly suspected to be crypto asset extortion.
Vienna police reported that the suspects, aged 19 and 45, fled to Austria for three days after the crime and were then arrested inside Ukraine. The case has been handed over to Ukrainian authorities and no extradition will occur. Local media revealed that the incident began in the parking lot of the Sofitel Hotel, where the victim was ambushed and forced into a car, then brutally beaten in the Donau City area—losing teeth and nearly suffocating to death—before being doused with gasoline and set on fire. Police found a melted fuel canister in the car’s back seat, confirming gasoline as the source of the fire.
This murder comes as violent crimes targeting cryptocurrency holders are surging globally, known in the industry as “Wrench Attacks.” According to Casa co-founder Jameson Lopp, nearly 70 such incidents have occurred this year, with over 30% taking place in Europe.
Similar cases have recently emerged worldwide: a San Francisco home invasion forced the transfer of $11 million in crypto assets; a torture-style home robbery in Canada resulted in the theft of $1.6 million in Bitcoin; and in the UAE, a crypto promoter and his wife were murdered in an extreme case.
Ari Redbord, TRM Labs’ Global Head of Policy, stated that Europe’s city density, widespread crypto adoption, and active criminal groups make the region an easier target. He noted that as hacking becomes more difficult, criminals are shifting from online attacks to physical coercion.
With crypto assets being highly liquid, transferable across borders, and hard to trace, “Wrench Attacks” have become a high-reward target for criminals. This trend highlights the urgent need for crypto holders to strengthen self-protection and privacy measures. (Decrypt)
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Two Ukrainian men arrested in Austria for suspected crypto extortion murder case, "wrench attacks" accelerating globally
Austrian police recently arrested two Ukrainian men suspected of torturing a 21-year-old university student, robbing him of his cryptocurrency, and ultimately killing and burning his body. The victim was identified as Danylo K., the son of the deputy mayor of Kharkiv, Ukraine. His burned remains were found in the back seat of a Mercedes. Police stated that the victim’s crypto wallet funds were completely withdrawn after the incident, with the motive strongly suspected to be crypto asset extortion.
Vienna police reported that the suspects, aged 19 and 45, fled to Austria for three days after the crime and were then arrested inside Ukraine. The case has been handed over to Ukrainian authorities and no extradition will occur. Local media revealed that the incident began in the parking lot of the Sofitel Hotel, where the victim was ambushed and forced into a car, then brutally beaten in the Donau City area—losing teeth and nearly suffocating to death—before being doused with gasoline and set on fire. Police found a melted fuel canister in the car’s back seat, confirming gasoline as the source of the fire.
This murder comes as violent crimes targeting cryptocurrency holders are surging globally, known in the industry as “Wrench Attacks.” According to Casa co-founder Jameson Lopp, nearly 70 such incidents have occurred this year, with over 30% taking place in Europe.
Similar cases have recently emerged worldwide: a San Francisco home invasion forced the transfer of $11 million in crypto assets; a torture-style home robbery in Canada resulted in the theft of $1.6 million in Bitcoin; and in the UAE, a crypto promoter and his wife were murdered in an extreme case.
Ari Redbord, TRM Labs’ Global Head of Policy, stated that Europe’s city density, widespread crypto adoption, and active criminal groups make the region an easier target. He noted that as hacking becomes more difficult, criminals are shifting from online attacks to physical coercion.
With crypto assets being highly liquid, transferable across borders, and hard to trace, “Wrench Attacks” have become a high-reward target for criminals. This trend highlights the urgent need for crypto holders to strengthen self-protection and privacy measures. (Decrypt)