A cybercrime crew composed mostly of California-based youth has been indicted for orchestrating a massive crypto heist, stealing over $260 million in Bitcoin and laundering it through an elaborate web of digital tactics and real-world crimes.
What began as a group of online gamers allegedly evolved into a high-stakes criminal network. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the ring infiltrated databases, manipulated victims through social engineering, and even broke into homes to physically steal hardware wallets.
Their largest hit came in August 2024, when more than 4,100 BTC were fraudulently extracted from a single crypto creditor.
Federal officials have now charged 12 new suspects in connection with the case, expanding on prior charges against lead figure Malone Lam. Some members were arrested in the U.S., while others are suspected of fleeing to Dubai.
The accused, many aged between 18 and 22, operated under aliases like “The Accountant” and “Goth Ferrari,” and allegedly masked their tracks using VPNs, crypto mixers, and peel chains—a laundering method involving step-by-step transfers.
Their newfound wealth funded a spree of excess: luxury cars, private jet rentals, fake IDs, and $500,000 nights out, according to investigators. While some stateside arrests have been made, the DOJ notes that the investigation remains active, as authorities seek to dismantle what they now call a “cyber-enabled racketeering conspiracy.”
The U.S. Department of Justice has sentenced Dwayne Golden, 57, of Pennsylvania to 97 months in prison for orchestrating a fraudulent crypto investment scheme that stole over $40 million from investors.
The first half of 2025 has become the most damaging six-month period in crypto history, with over $2.1 billion stolen across 75+ separate incidents, according to new data.
A new breed of cyber-attack is sweeping through crypto media, exploiting site pop-ups and wallet-connect prompts instead of smart-contract bugs.
CoinMarketCap, one of the most widely used crypto data tracking platforms, is reportedly facing a front-end security breach, with multiple users encountering a suspicious prompt to verify their wallets.