Armed Men Steal $820K in Crypto From French Family in Ploudalmezeau Home Invasion
Key Takeaways:
- Two armed men held a family hostage in Ploudalmezeau for over 3 hours, forcing a $820,000 crypto transfer on April 20, 2026.
- France has recorded more than 40 cryptocurrency-linked kidnappings since January 2026, signaling a sharp escalation in targeted crypto crime.
- JIRS Rennes, France’s organized crime court, is leading the investigation with no arrests made as of April 22, 2026.
France Crypto Kidnapping: Brittany Family Loses $820,000 in Digital Assets at Gunpoint
According to several reports (1, 2, 3), the attack took place around 9:00 a.m. at a residential home in the Keruscat housing development in Ploudalmezeau, a commune of roughly 6,500 people north of Brest in France‘s Finistere department. The father, who works in the cryptocurrency sector, was not home at the time.
Le Télégramme reports that five family members were present: a mother in her thirties, her two young children, and two grandparents. The attackers isolated the children in a separate room, then tied and gagged the three adults.
Under threat of physical violence, including explicit threats to cut off a finger, the mother was coerced into providing the password to the couple’s digital wallet and completing a transfer of approximately 700,000 euros in digital assets.
A neighbor noticed something unusual and called authorities around 12:30 p.m. The two men fled the scene, taking one of the family’s vehicles. Police launched a large search operation across northern Finistere. The stolen vehicle was recovered that evening, abandoned in the parking lot of a training center in Brest.
Local surveillance cameras at nearby roundabouts captured footage that investigators are now reviewing. The Brest prosecutor’s office opened an initial inquiry before quickly transferring the case to the Juridiction Interregionale Specialisee, or JIRS, in Rennes, the French court that handles organized crime.
The JIRS is investigating charges that include organized theft, kidnapping and unlawful detention of hostages, participation in a criminal association, and organized money laundering. The office said, “the necessities of the investigation do not allow immediate communication.”
As of April 22, 2026, no arrests have been made. The investigation is expected to combine digital asset tracing with traditional police methods. Mayor David Carrega visited the family the afternoon of the attack and arranged psychological support at a local hospital. All five victims were reported as traumatized.
The family had no prior criminal history or known public profile. Investigators believe the perpetrators conducted surveillance before the attack, given how precisely they targeted the household.
This incident fits a pattern that French authorities have been tracking for months. More than 40 sequestrations and kidnappings tied to cryptocurrency extortion have been recorded in France since January 2026, with a similar number of arrests in related cases. French prosecutors, including the Parquet National Anti-Criminalite, have classified these cases as a priority.
Perpetrators in similar cases have used careful targeting, sometimes with overseas organizers, and methods ranging from residential break-ins to more elaborate operations. Several prior incidents have ended in arrests, though recovery of stolen digital assets has varied.
The Ploudalmezeau case illustrates a direct threat that has developed alongside rising cryptocurrency ownership in France. When a person’s digital holdings are known or suspected, the assets can attract physical danger. The investigation in Rennes continues.
