Suspect of organizing “major bitcoin robbery” arrested in Amsterdam

Suspect of organizing “major bitcoin robbery” arrested in Amsterdam

Amsterdam police have arrested Sindri Thor Stefansson, an Icelandic citizen accused of organizing a large-scale theft of bitcoin mining equipment. Six hundred computers were stolen in a series of four raids on data centers across the southern part of the country in February. The stolen equipment, which has not been recovered at the time of writing, is worth $2 million.

In an interview with the Associated Press, local police commissioner Olafur Kjartansson described the raid as a "grand heist on a scale never seen before" in Iceland.

Stefansson was one of 11 people arrested in connection with the theft after energy company HS Orka said it saw "excessive energy use" in data centers due to cryptocurrency mining and verification operations.

Stefansson, who was not considered a dangerous prisoner, was transferred to a minimum security facility in an Icelandic prison, from which he escaped ten days after his imprisonment. According to local media, Stefansson took a taxi to Keflavik International Airport, where he boarded a plane to Sweden under a false name. Iceland's Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir was on the same flight to meet Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Stefansson was arrested in Amsterdam on an international warrant, five days after fleeing Iceland. According to his lawyer, he will return to Iceland to appear in court within the next few days

According to https://www.wikitribune.com

You May Also Like

132018-07-06

SIX Digital Exchange will work like clockwork

SIX, the operator of the Swiss stock exchange, has announced its plans to launch SIX Digital Exchange, a cryptocurrency exchange fully regulated by the financial regulator and central bank.

Events
142018-09-26

Mt.Gox trustee puts cryptocurrency up for sale again

The trustee of the bankrupt company Mt.Gox, Japanese lawyer Nobuaki Kobayashi, better known in the cryptocurrency community as “The Whale of Tokyo,” withdrew another 25.98 billion yen ($230 million) from the exchanger in Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash cryptocurrencies.

Events

Latest articles from Events category

Fresh video on our Channel