Man says wife stole $172 million in Bitcoin after hidden CCTV cameras captured wallet password

midian182

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WTF?! Cold wallets are supposed to keep crypto safe from online attackers, but that protection counts for nothing when the threat is inside the house. A UK businessman is accusing his estranged wife of stealing 2,323 Bitcoin, worth about $172 million, after she allegedly used covert CCTV cameras to capture the recovery phrase for his hardware wallet.

According to High Court filings, Ping Fai Yuen claims his wife, Fun Yung Li, secretly recorded him entering the seed phrase and access codes for his Trezor cold wallet at their family home in August 2023.

The judgment says the device was protected by a six-digit PIN, but anyone with access to the 24-word seed phrase could recreate the wallet on another device. The exact amount at the center of the dispute is 2,323.28423347 Bitcoin, worth around $172 million.

Yuen says the information was then used to recreate the wallet and transfer the Bitcoin out without his knowledge on August 2, 2023.

The complaint alleges the funds were moved across 71 blockchain addresses not held at third-party exchanges, where they have reportedly remained since December 21, 2023.

Yuen is suing his estranged wife and her sister, who he claims may also have been involved, seeking the return of the Bitcoin or its cash equivalent as well as a worldwide freezing order over the crypto assets.

Yuen says he was warned by his eldest daughter in early July 2023 that Li was trying to take the Bitcoin. He then installed audio recording equipment of his own, which allegedly captured conversations on July 29 and July 31 about the missing crypto, whether the transfer could be traced, how hard it would be to explain that much money to banks, the risk of attracting money-laundering scrutiny, the possibility of using the funds in small amounts, and even using a second wallet and calling a hacker. There was also discussion about Hong Kong.

The case became even messier after police arrested Li on December 23, 2023. According to the ruling, officers allegedly searched her home and seized valuable watches, 10 cold wallets, and five recovery seeds.

Police were reportedly able to access four of the wallets, while three others had names attributable to Yuen. Li later gave a no-comment interview, and police have since said they would take no further action pending new evidence.

Mr Justice Cotter allowed the broader claim to continue and said Yuen appears to have a very high probability of success, with the transcripts described as damning and the seized hardware adding to the weight of the evidence.

But the judge also dismissed claims based on conversion and trespass to goods, essentially saying those traditional property laws do not clearly apply to Bitcoin because it is not a physical asset.

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Can't stop laughing when I read stuff like this. Like the fool who searched the landfill for an old HDD with bitcoin. He will be searching till the day he die. That **** is long gone.

This is why crypto is stupid. Criminals can steal every single coin and enjoy. No trace. Probably also the reason mostly criminals like crypto.

If you manage to get rich on crypto, never ever speak about it, or you will captured and held hostage, or you family will (if you own millions in crypto)

Rich people that like crypto, focus on pump and dump. There is very few winners.

I know like 10 people who lost most/all of their money trying to get rich on crypto... If its too good to be true... It probably is.

I had BTC and ETH myself tho, in the early days. That ship has sailed.
 
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Why do these people keep all of their bitcoin in a single place?

Cold wallets are cheap when you are storing millions. Losing 1/10th of your bitcoin isn't nearly as devastating as all of it.
 
Why do these people keep all of their bitcoin in a single place?

Cold wallets are cheap when you are storing millions. Losing 1/10th of your bitcoin isn't nearly as devastating as all of it.
Cold wallets are physical assets too. So if she stole one the property laws would apply.
 
This is why crypto is stupid. Criminals can steal every single coin and enjoy. No trace.
You have it exactly backwards. They still know exactly where every penny of this crypto is. Had the woman instead stolen assets in cash, the money would indeed now be untraceable.

Cold wallets are cheap when you are storing millions. Losing 1/10th of your bitcoin isn't nearly as devastating as all of it.
Simple statistics. Placing it on 10 different wallets in 10 different locations means less opportunity to lose it all, but 10X the chance of losing at least 1/10 of it.
 
You have it exactly backwards. They still know exactly where every penny of this crypto is. Had the woman instead stolen assets in cash, the money would indeed now be untraceable.


Simple statistics. Placing it on 10 different wallets in 10 different locations means less opportunity to lose it all, but 10X the chance of losing at least 1/10 of it.
Money is digital today FYI. Unless you are a criminal but they also like crypto for the same reason as cash, untraceable.



https://www.justice.gov/usao-mn/pr/brothers-charged-8-million-armed-crypto-kidnapping-heist-0

Tons of examples, literally 100s of news about crypto being stolen, people abused or held hostage to give up their crypto - anyone can steal your coins and *puf* they will be gone.

Atleast when using banks, your deposit will be safe and guarranteed/insured. Which is why actual rich people, mostly uses crypto for pump and dump.
 
Unless you are a criminal but they also like crypto for the same reason as cash, untraceable.
No. Every transaction ever made by every cryptocoin is stored -- permanently and publicly visible -- in its blockchain.

The only thing that's hidden is who controls the account the coins are in -- and even that anonymity is pierceable, given time and effort.

... literally 100s of news about crypto being stolen.
And in each case, where the coins went are easily traceable. Meanwhile, there are literally hundreds of millions of stories of cash being stolen.

Atleast when using banks, your deposit will be safe and guarranteed/insured. Which is why actual rich people, mostly uses crypto for pump and dump.
Err, if you have large amounts in the bank, it is far from "safe and insured". In the US, that insurance is limited to $250K, whereas Europe it's even lower -- 100K only.
 
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