Bitcoin money laundering suspect arrested by Dutch police

Quick Take

  • The unidentified man is suspected of laundering bitcoin stolen from victims who used a fake version of the Electrum wallet.
  • Dutch police released the man on Tuesday but say he remains a suspect in the matter.

A man arrested by Dutch authorities last week for allegedly laundering stolen bitcoin worth tens of millions of dollars has been released but still remains a suspect, according to a statement by Dutch police on Tuesday.

The unidentified man, aged 39, is accused of laundering bitcoin that was stolen via a fake version of Electrum, an open-source bitcoin wallet, according to the police.

“Investigation showed that the man converted bitcoin into the privacy coin monero and vice versa, which makes the trail of transactions more difficult to track. His service was provided via the anonymous online network Bisq. It is suspected that the man earned a lot from laundering in this way,” the police said in a statement.

Monero is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency. Unlike bitcoin, monero’s distributed ledger system incorporates features that make it difficult to trace the participants in a transaction. Bisq is a decentralized crypto exchange.

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According to the announcement, the police raided the suspect’s home in Veenendaal, a village in the Utrecht province. Dutch police seized the man’s crypto holdings including the profit made from the alleged money laundering.

Despite being released on Tuesday, the police say the man is still a suspect. Both the cybercrime teams of the central and eastern Netherlands are in charge of the investigation.


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About Author

Osato is a news reporter at The Block as part of the crypto ecosystems team that focuses on DAO governance, staking, blockchain layers, and DeFi. He was previously a news reporter at Cointelegraph. Based in Lagos, Nigeria, he enjoys crosswords, poker, and attempting to beat his Scrabble high score. Follow him on Twitter at @OsatoNomayo.