The world of digital currency is being shaken by violent real-world crime as attackers move from code to coercion in unprecedented ways.
Cryptocurrency has long been associated with cutting edge technology, decentralized finance, and revolutionary ideas about money. But in recent months, the crypto space has been rocked by a disturbing trend that exposes just how fragile the human side of blockchain security can be. The revolution in digital finance now faces a very real, very physical threat: organized criminals using intimidation and violence to try to force victims to surrender their holdings. This latest development came into stark focus in France, where a botched home invasion on February 12 targeted a senior figure connected to one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges.
The incident occurred in the Val-de-Marne suburb of Paris, where three masked men attempted to break into a residence thought to belong to the head of Binance’s French unit. Reports from multiple outlets indicate that the assailants initially entered the wrong apartment, briefly terrorizing innocent residents before realizing they were in the incorrect location. Afterward, they forced their way into what they believed was the target address, stole two mobile phones, and fled the scene.
Within hours, however, French authorities tracked down the suspects using CCTV footage and the stolen phones, arresting them at Lyon Perrache station. The rapid police response and subsequent arrests underscore both the seriousness with which the French justice system is treating crypto-linked violence and the amateurish nature of the attack itself. In a statement following the event, Binance confirmed one of its employees had been targeted, emphasizing that the individual and their family were safe and that company leadership was cooperating fully with law enforcement.
This failed invasion was not an isolated oddity. Security researchers have documented a sharp increase in what are colloquially called “wrench attacks” a reference to a meme that illustrates how simple physical coercion, such as threatening someone with a wrench, can bypass even the strongest digital defenses. These assaults involve forcing or threatening individuals to reveal private keys, passwords, or authorization codes for cryptocurrency transfers. According to cybersecurity firm CertiK, there were at least 72 verified wrench attacks worldwide in 2025, a 75 percent increase over the previous year, resulting in confirmed losses exceeding $40.9 million.
Europe accounted for more than 40 percent of these incidents last year, with France alone reporting 19 wrench attacks more than any other country. That concentration of cases has created what many security analysts describe as a “hotspot” for crypto linked physical coercion, where visibility into crypto ecosystems, data leaks, and public regulatory compliance requirements combine to make certain individuals particularly vulnerable.
The drive behind these crimes is straightforward: while bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are safeguarded by cryptographic keys and decentralized networks, the holders of large amounts of digital assets remain human. Where there is high value, there is incentive for attackers to seek shortcuts that exploit people rather than technology. In many cases, victims are pressured into handing over access because they fear for their safety or that of loved ones. The trend shifts the threat model from remote cyber theft to direct, real world coercion.
Experts say that wrench attacks have evolved from opportunistic crimes into a more organized pattern of threat. Rather than merely choosing random victims, attackers have begun to use open-source intelligence (OSINT) and public data to identify high-profile individuals whether executives, founders, or active investors as targets. In this context, visibility and traceability become dangerous vulnerabilities. Every public appearance, news mention, or social media post potentially increases exposure.
The Binance France case demonstrated this danger. Local media named the likely intended target as David Prinçay, the president of Binance France. While Binance declined to confirm exactly which employee was targeted for safety reasons, Prinçay’s name appeared in multiple reports alongside details of the attack and its fallout.
France’s experience is not unique, but it is pronounced. The country’s regulatory environment has pushed exchanges and crypto service providers to collect and store large amounts of identity information about users and executives. Compliance with anti money laundering laws, travel-rule data requirements, and other standards has generated datasets that, if accessed illicitly, could reveal more about individuals than they intended to disclose. Combined with data breaches and alleged insider leaks, this regulatory transparency creates a paradox: compliance protects consumers from financial crime but may also generate information that makes individuals easier to locate and target.
Lessons from past cases underscore the seriousness of this threat. In 2025, crypto hardware wallet company Ledger saw one of its co-founders and his wife kidnapped in France, a harrowing case that ended only after a major police rescue operation. In other instances, individuals have reported assaults and ransom demands made in cryptocurrency. These stories, once fringe anecdotes, now form part of an emerging pattern that digital asset holders cannot ignore.
Industry voices have responded with a mix of caution and defensive strategy. Some executives are hiring private security, limiting public exposure, and reducing the sharing of personal information online. Others warn that the very tools that make crypto powerful immutability, pseudonymity, and self-custody can also leave individuals without recourse when threats turn physical. Traditional finance systems, by contrast, have regulatory safety nets, insurance, and legal protections that shield stakeholders from some of the risks faced in decentralized ecosystems.
The broader crypto community is watching closely as France becomes a focal point for these developments. For regulators and policymakers, the rise in wrench attacks raises questions about how to balance innovation with safety. Can legal frameworks adapt quickly to protect individuals without stifling growth? Should there be international cooperation to fight transnational criminal networks exploiting financial technologies? There are no easy answers, but ignoring the problem is no longer an option.
A critical part of the solution lies in education. Crypto holders are often advised to secure their private keys, use cold storage, and avoid sharing sensitive information. But as these attacks show, digital hygiene is only one dimension of security. Physical safety, operational privacy, and personal risk awareness must now be part of the conversation. The traditional paradigm of “secure your keys, secure your crypto” needs an update that acknowledges the real-world stakes of digital wealth.
At the same time, exchanges and industry platforms must rethink how they communicate about leadership, public appointments, and organizational structure. Reducing optional exposure and shielding executives from undue visibility may help dampen the attractiveness of high profile targets to criminal elements. This does not mean hiding information or avoiding transparency altogether rather, it means exercising greater discretion about what is shared publicly.
Law enforcement agencies across Europe are also stepping up their responses. National anti-organized crime prosecutors and specialized units are treating crypto-linked wrench attacks not as isolated thefts but as part of broader threats involving kidnapping, extortion, and violent coercion. The arrests in the Binance France case demonstrate that coordinated police action can disrupt these criminal efforts, but sustained commitment will be essential to prevent future incidents.
For everyday crypto enthusiasts, the message is clear: digital assets cannot be divorced from physical realities. Cybersecurity remains vital, but the rise of wrench attacks reminds us that the human element identity, location, human behavior is often the weakest link in any security chain. Protecting wallets and private keys means little if attackers can threaten the people behind them.
In this new era, vigilance is not optional. The crypto community must embrace a holistic understanding of risk that incorporates both the digital and physical domains. Only by doing so can the promise of decentralized technology coexist with the safety of those who build, invest in, and advance it.


