Two young men accused of committing one of the largest person-to-person crypto thefts in U.S. history went on a brazen spending spree that included buying exotic cars, a $2 million wristwatch, renting mansions and running up nightclub tabs of hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece, new court records reveal.
The Aug. 18 cyber heist swindled a Washington, D.C., resident out of $230 million in cryptocurrency. To date, at least $100 million in bitcoin stolen from the victim remains unaccounted for, prosecutors said in a recent court filing in D.C federal court.
Police now say that another crime, the mysterious Aug. 25 kidnapping of a Connecticut couple in broad daylight while they were house hunting, may be connected to the Washington crypto theft.
Authorities are investigating whether the kidnapping was part of a plot to demand ransom from the couple’s son — who is being investigated for possible involvement in the crypto heist.
“I’ve never seen anything like this in 20 years,” Detective Sgt. Steven Castrovinci of the Danbury, Connecticut, Police Department, told CNBC.
That heist of more than 4,100 bitcoin occurred just a week before the couple was carjacked in Danbury, while driving a Lamborghini automobile that their son had rented.
Six Florida men now face state and federal charges in Connecticut in connection with the kidnapping.
They have not been charged in connection with the cryptocurrency theft. Nor has the unidentified son of the couple who was abducted.
“It’s amazing to see how this thing has grown legs,” Castrovinci said.
Source: Danbury Police Department
On Sept. 19, just a month after the crypto heist, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia announced that the FBI had arrested two men — Malone Lam, 20, and 21-year-old Jeandiel Serrano — on conspiracy charges related to their alleged theft and subsequent laundering of the stolen bitcoin.
Serrano, who uses the online monikers “VersaceGod” and “@SkidStar,” was wearing a $500,000 watch at the time of his arrest in Los Angeles, where he lives, according to prosecutors.
Both men, who are being held without bail, admitted their role in the heist, prosecutors have said in court filings.
Serrano’s lawyer, Paulette Pagan, had no immediate comment on his case. CNBC has requested comment from a lawyer for Lam, a Singapore resident who had been living in L.A. and Miami after overstaying by months a visa waiver that allowed him to visit the U.S. as a tourist for just 90 days.
The scheme at the center of the bizarre case is “one of the largest cryptocurrency thefts from a private individual … in the history of the United States,” according to a federal court filing.
The Danbury News-Times first reported on Oct. 11 that Danbury police had planned to interview the couple’s son, but held off at the request of the FBI.
“We were contacted by the FBI and told there’s an ongoing investigation into the son in regards to a cryptocurrency theft that occurred,” Castrovinci told the newspaper.
“That’s how we knew — and even at that time, we didn’t really know to what extent he was involved in it. We just knew that there was an investigation into him regarding a crypto heist,” he said.
“I don’t know how (the six Florida men) knew this kid had that type of money, but everything leads to them going after the parents because of what this kid was involved in,” he told the newspaper.
Castrovinci told CNBC that it is “certainly a good possibility” that the kidnappers planned to hold the couple for ransom, believing their son could pay.
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Connecticut declined to comment when asked about the possible connection between the carjacking and kidnapping of the couple, and their son’s potential role in the August crypto heist.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in D.C. did not immediately respond to requests for comment.