In a twist that feels more like a dark comedy than a procedural drama, police officers from the Gangnam Police Station in Seoul have been caught mishandling seized Bitcoin. They did not just misplace a password, they effectively handed the keys to a thief.
The blunder resulted in the loss of $1.4 million in Bitcoin, sparking an investigation that has now led to arrests.
Back in 2021, officers at the Gangnam Police Station seized 22 Bitcoin from a company implicated in a hacking case. At today’s prices, that stash is worth roughly $1.4 million.
Standard procedure dictates that seized crypto should be moved to a secure cold wallet controlled solely by the police. The National Police Agency even has specific guidelines recommending that assets be stored in a “separately installed safe” on a hard wallet managed by the investigative agency.
The Gangnam officers ignored this. Instead, they allowed the funds to sit in a wallet managed by a third-party firm. Worse, the police did not even possess the seed phrase, the master password required to access the funds. They essentially seized a safe but let a stranger keep the combination.
Predictably, the funds vanished. In 2022, an individual identified as “Jeong,” who had access to the wallet’s secret phrase, moved the Bitcoin. The police only realized the money was gone this year, nearly two years later, during an unrelated audit by the Gwangju District Prosecutors’ Office.
According to local media reports, Gyeonggi Northern Provincial Police Agency official stated, “We are investigating the circumstances surrounding the virtual asset leak, and as the investigation is still ongoing, we cannot confirm any specifics.”
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A Custody Nightmare? A Systemic Failure?
The South Korean government seized a Bitcoin wallet.
Then, not realizing what they were doing, they shared photos that exposed the wallet’s seed phrase.
They ended up losing the seized #Bitcoin all over again.
pic.twitter.com/OvSNuzvhsq
— Ferre (@FerreWeb3) February 27, 2026
Reports suggest that the failure to secure the keys might not have been an accident. A former officer from the original investigation team has already been indicted on bribery charges, with allegations that the third-party firm offered bribes to ensure the investigation went in their favor.
Similarly, breaches of trust have come to light in the past where a crypto CEO was sentenced for running a massive Ponzi scheme. Whether it is a CEO or a police officer, if a human being can be bribed or negligent, your funds are at risk.
Notably, this comes right after South Korean regulators were slammed for missing a flaw that led to a $43 billion accounting error at the Bithumb exchange. The gap between the relentless regulatory crackdown on traders and the sloppy operational security of the regulators themselves is becoming impossible to ignore.
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What This Means For You: The Bitcoin Self-Custody Lesson
Self-custody brings its own risks. It prevents remote theft, but physical threats are real. Just look at the recent wrench attack on a Binance employee in France.
Two suspects, including the individual “Jeong,” have been arrested by the Gyeonggi Northern Provincial Police Agency. The investigation is now focused on exactly how the Bitcoin was leaked and whether other officers were complicit in the negligence or bribery.
For the South Korean government, this is a humiliating wake-up call. We expect strict new protocols to be enforced across all precincts handling digital evidence.
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Key Takeaways
- South Korean police lost $1.4 million in seized Bitcoin because they allowed a third party to control the private keys.
- The incident highlights a critical failure in operational security, worsened by allegations of bribery within the investigative team.
- This serves as a reminder to practice self-custody; never rely on third parties to secure your long-term holdings.
The post South Korean Police Mishandled $1.4M In Bitcoin: Suspects Arrested appeared first on 99Bitcoins.









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