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How to protect yourself from the recent spate of ‘crypto muggings’

Cointelegraph spoke with security experts who shared tips on how to keep crypto safe after a slew of robberies in the UK successfully stole thousands worth of crypto from everyday holders.

There has been a spate of “crypto muggings” in London recently, with thieves threatening crypto holders with violence unless they transfer over their digital currencies held in mobile phone wallets or on crypto exchanges.

As detailed by The Guardian UK, crime reports from the City of London police detail how thousands of dollars worth of crypto has been stolen by thugs in person. One victim said their phone had been pick-pocketed while out drinking and they later realized over $12,000 worth of Ethereum (ETH) had been siphoned from their Crypto.com account. The victims believes the thieves witnessed them type in their account pin.

Another victim was approached by a group offering to sell him cocaine and after moving to another location to buy the drugs, the person was held against a wall whilst the gang accessed his phone and crypto account using facial verification, transferring over $7,000 worth of Ripple (XRP) to their own wallets.

This is an increasingly common variation on what is termed a “$5 wrench attack”.

As blockchain transactions are irreversible and most methods of cryptocurrency storage place responsibility for security of the assets with the individual who owns them, Cointelegraph spoke with blockchain security firm BlockSec who shared the following tips on how to protect crypto from a mugging:

“Do not deposit a large amount of crypto in a wallet or exchange app. Only leave a small portion in there. You can have a multi-sig wallet and with a policy saying only two signers can move the money in the wallet. By doing so, only a small amount of crypto will be lost during the mugging.”

BlockSec also suggested a way to trick thieves if a crypto user is mugged, saying some smart phones can have different logins which can hide certain applications such as Huawei’s “PrivateSpace” feature:

“The apps in the 'PrivateSpace' are different from the main ones actually used. So if the users are mugged they can enter into the 'PrivateSpace' showing that they don’t have any crypto apps installed on their phone, or vice versa, can hide crypto apps in this space.”

Samsung phones have a similar feature called a “secure folder” which can be used to hide all your crypto applications behind a PIN or password and the folder itself can also be hidden from the home screen.

On Apple iPhones apps can be moved to one page on the home screen and hidden all at once, and there are further options such as removing an individual app from showing on the home screen only to be accessed via search.

Cointelegraph also spoke with a pseudonymous Twitter user and independent security researcher known as “CIA Officer” popular for creating and sharing guides and tips on how crypto users can harden security of their assets.

CIA Officer shared an article they wrote in April featuring 13 tips on the principles of storing cryptocurrencies, saying:

“I wrote the article because my sense of justice just pushes me forward because maybe the biggest threat to crypto is crypto scams as people just get disappointed and leave forever.”

In the article, CIA Officer gives a reminder that mobile wallets like MetaMask are only interfaces and recommends storing all crypto on a cold wallet such as Ledger or Trezor as opposed to keeping it on an exchange or in a mobile wallet.

Related: Warning: Smartphone text prediction guesses crypto hodler’s seed phrase

A physical storage device will keep all crypto offline and assets can only be moved if someone has access to the wallet along with knowing the PIN and in some cases a password. One can even be created using an old smartphone rather than using a dedicated device.

The crypto stored on the cold wallet can be further security hardened and CIA Officer echoes the advice from BlockSec to set up a multi-signature wallet th uses two or even three separate devices to approve a transaction.

CIA Officer also shared their rules for crypto OpSec, which is shorthand for “operational security” a process of risk management with the goal of preventing leaks of sensitive information.

“You should build your own stone wall of OpSec, so you'll know perfectly what to do if something happens.”

In light of the muggings, such OpSec measures include keeping any crypto investments a total secret. Potential thieves in public settings could overhear a discussion or even witness a person’s crypto holdings, as in the above case where the victim was pickpocketed.

“Being suspicious is always a good thing,” CIA Officer writes, “you may try to be hacked through acquaintances, either those pretending to be acquaintances or acquaintances themselves.”

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Terrible crypto trader gets 42 months for fraud, claiming he was a total gun

Jeremy Spence aka “Coin Signals” scammed around $5 million from 170 investors who were unaware their crypto was used to fund a Ponzi scheme.

A crypto trader who defrauded over 170 people was sentenced to 42 months in prison on May 11 for operating a series of cryptocurrency funds claiming to make big returns but in reality were losing money and instead operated as a Ponzi scheme.

The DOJ said that 25 year old  Jeremy Spence had solicited millions through false representations, “including that Spence’s crypto trading had been extremely profitable when, in fact, Spence’s trading had been consistently unprofitable.”

Spence, who operated the social media channels for a crypto investment scheme called “Coin Signals” was handed the decision by United Stated District Judge Lewis Kaplan for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Spence was also sentenced to three years of supervised release and ordered to pay back his victims an amount of over $2.8 million.

Spence was arrested in January 2021 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and seperate civil charges were brought forward by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Spence pleaded guilty to commodities fraud in November 2021 for soliciting over $5 million from unwitting crypto investors by creating various cryptocurrency funds from November 2017 until April 2019 which he falsely claimed were making returns but in reality were making losses.

One example provided by the DOJ said Spence posted a message to an online chat group claiming one of the funds made a 148% return that month.

According to Law360 U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan who presided over the case said:

"The thing I was struck by was the stupidity of the people you gulled into investing with you, there are real-life consequences to these shenanigans and they are serious."

Seeking to make a profit investors would transfer crypto to Spence to invest but as his trades weren’t making gains he created fake account balances to hide the losses. Spence started operating a Ponzi scheme using funds from new investors to pay earlier investors, with estimates that around $2 million worth of cryptocurrencies were distributed in this manner.

Related: ​​Making crypto conventional by improving crypto crime investigations worldwide

In a statement to the court Spence told Judge Kaplan that he is “mortified” by his own behavior, apologizing to his investors and claimed was unqualified to trade the amount he was sent adding he “entered a world that [he] was completely unprepared for”.

Cointelegraph requested comment from Spence's legal representatives but did not receive a response within the time given.

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US gov attorneys to target individuals and gatekeepers for crypto prosecutions

Major regulatory agencies plan to work harder to prosecute individuals and companies that have had dodgy dealings with digital assets.

A group of high-level U.S. government attorneys has oulined their priorities for the enforcement and prosecution of individuals and companies that have committed crypto-related crimes.

Enforcement officials from the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) spoke about the direction their agencies will take at a panel discussion at the American Bar Association's annual institute on white-collar crime in Miami on Oct. 27.

In addition to corporate players, lawmakers are taking a closer look at individuals according to a report of the event by Law360. Principal deputy assistant attorney general of the DoJ's Criminal Division, Nicholas McQuaid, stated the prosecution of individuals in white-collar cases was a top priority.

He added that the department was expanding its use of data-based probes in such cases relating to cryptocurrencies. The DoJ is forming a specialized group within the FBI to work with its fraud section to assist with investigations and prosecutions.

SEC Enforcement Director Gurbir Grewal commented on the agency’s increased scrutiny of unregistered and fraudulent initial coin offerings (ICOs), unregistered crypto exchanges, and crypto lending and award programs. He stated “we'll make sure that those players and actors are abiding by the rules,” before adding:

“That's why we'll be taking a hard look at gatekeepers like auditors and audit firms, attorneys, and underwriters.”

In early September, the SEC threatened legal action against Coinbase over its stablecoin yield program, Lend. Coinbase has since scrapped plans to launch the service.

The SEC also targeted Terraform Labs CEO Do Kwon with a subpoena in September. Being a resident of South Korea, Kwon hascontested it on grounds that the regulator had no jurisdiction.

In October 2020, the DoJ filed criminal charges against four BitMEX executives for illegally operating a derivatives exchange, the trial has been set for March 2022.

Related: Regulatory and privacy concerns trail SEC’s threat to Coinbase

Acting director of enforcement for the CFTC, Vincent McGonagle, said he was also concerned about digital assets and the decentralized finance (DeFi) sector. He did note that the crypto asset space may not be the sole component of illegal activity as there may be other factors involved such as forex:

“In the digital asset space, we've brought several actions against entities where they're offering digital assets, Bitcoin or others on a margin or finance basis.”

Government agencies are clearly ramping up activity against crypto companies and individuals.

In mid-August, lawmakers urged the SEC and CFTC to form a joint working group on crypto assets so that they could work out how to “effectively use their current jurisdiction cooperatively.” In late September, the CFTC charged 12 New York crypto options firms for failing to register.

On Oct. 18, the New York Attorney General’s office ordered crypto lending firms to cease activities. The Celsius crypto lending platform stated that it was not one of the two but was instead working with NY regulators.

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Crypto Crime Falls in China, Surges in Hong Kong, Reports Reveal

Crypto Crime Falls in China, Surges in Hong Kong, Reports RevealChina’s cryptocurrency transactions related to criminal activities have decreased significantly over the past couple of years, a new report suggests. At the same time, its special administrative region of Hong Kong is seeing a spike in crypto-related crime this year, with authorities attributing the rise to the popularity of crypto investments. Chinese Crime-Related Crypto Transactions […]

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China crypto crime: Still ‘top ranked’ for illicit activity but crime is falling

Chinese wallets both sent and received more than $2 billion worth of crypto associated with illicit activities between April 2019 and June 2021.

A new report from Chainalysis has found that while China’s share of global criminal crypto flows has been falling since the third quarter of 2019, the country still represents a disproportionate amount of money laundering and scam activity.

In its August 3 Cryptocurrency and China report, Chainalysis stated that more than $2.2 billion worth of crypto had been sent from Chinese wallets to addresses associated with illicit activity between April 2019 and June 2021.

Chinese addresses also received more than $2 billion worth of digital assets tied to nefarious activity such as scams and darknet marketplaces. Despite this, the report says crime has fallen significantly:

“China’s transaction volume with illicit addresses has fallen drastically over the time period studied, both in terms of raw value and in relation to other countries. Much of the drop is due to the absence of large-scale Ponzi schemes like the 2019 PlusToken scam.”

Chainalysis added that, “While China remains one of the top-ranked countries for illicit transaction volume, it used to beat all others by a wide margin, suggesting that cryptocurrency-related crime in the country has fallen.”

The report's authors cite “historical transaction data” as suggesting that Chinese over-the-counter (OTC) Bitcoin brokers “have played an outsized role in facilitating money laundering for those involved in cryptocurrency-based crime.”

The report adds that the “vast majority” of illicit Chinese crypto flows have been associated with scam activity, although digital asset-based money laundering is still “disproportionately carried out in China.”

Chainalysis noted that China’s central government conducted more than 1,100 arrests associated with digital asset-based money laundering in June, indicating a willingness to crack down on the sector.

“It will be interesting to see whether the arrests lead to a drop in flows of illicit funds to China-based cryptocurrency businesses and OTC traders.”

Related: China’s crackdown signals an oncoming crypto ban, Bobby Lee says

However, Chainalysis speculates that China’s increasing moves to clamp down on traditional decentralized cryptocurrencies may undermine the nation’s status as a global crypto superpower moving forward.

The report attributes China’s renewed hostility toward decentralized crypto assets to its plans for widespread adoption of the digital yuan.

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Brazil’s ‘Bitcoin King’ arrested over 7,000 missing BTC

The alleged fraudster’s crypto brokerage filed for bankruptcy in 2019 after claiming to have been the victim of a hack.

Self-described “Bitcoin King,” Claudio Oliveira, has been arrested and charged by Brazilian federal police for allegedly masterminding a 1.5 billion reais (roughly $300 million) fraud scheme involving crypto.

Oliveria served as the president of Bitcoin Banco Group, a Brazilian crypto brokerage firm that has been under investigation since 2019 claiming to have lost 7,000 BTC in investor funds.

According to a rough translation of a June 5 press release, federal police from the Curitiba Metropolitan Region served Oliveira and other members of Bitcoin Banco Group with one preventive arrest warrant, four temporary arrest warrants, and 22 search and seizure warrants.

Bitcoin Banco Group reportedly lured investors with promises of exorbitant daily returns. According to police, alarm bells first began ringing early in 2019 when the platform started blocking withdrawal requests.

The platform claimed it was hacked in May 2019, but reportedly failed to provide evidence to support the claim. On June 6 a judge ordered the firm to provide evidence of the hack after a former client filed a lawsuit against the firm. The firm settled with the plaintiff in July.

By September their accounts had been frozen by the courts as they faced more than 200 lawsuits from disgruntled investors, with the incident estimated to have impacted more than 20,000 investors.

As a result of the alleged hack, Bitcoin Banco Group filed for judicial recovery — an agreement with local authorities to reorganize finances and pay creditors to avoid bankruptcy — with a bankruptcy court in Curitiba.

Despite Bitcoin Banco Group filing for judicial recovery, the firm reportedly operated business as usual and neglected their obligations with the bankruptcy court — including failing to repay creditors. The platform even continued to seek new customers, launching “public collective investment contracts” that it had not registered with the Brazilian Commission of Securities.

The investigation into Bitcoin Banco Group, dubbed "Operation Daemon," found that investors’ funds had been “diverted according to the interests of the criminal organization leader.”

A leaked tax return from 2018 showed that Oliveira had then claimed 25,000 BTC and 14 Brazilian properties among his assets.

Related: South African asset manager denies stealing billions from users, claims $5M was lost in hack

Oliveria is facing charges of bankruptcy crimes, embezzlement, money laundering, and operating a criminal organization in Brazil.

The investigation also found that the “Bitcoin King” may have operated similar schemes in the U.S. and Europe.

Best Wallet Raises $5M in New Crypto Presale, Expert Predicts 10x Potential

Instagram Influencer Charged for Allegedly Stealing Millions of Dollars in Bitcoin From Followers

Instagram Influencer Charged for Allegedly Stealing Millions of Dollars in Bitcoin From FollowersA popular Instagram personality has been charged in the U.S., accused of stealing bitcoins worth millions of dollars from his followers. He allegedly convinced the “victims to sell him their bitcoin at attractive, but inflated, values” but he never wired them the money for the coins sent to him. Instagram Influencer’s Bitcoin Scam The U.S. […]

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