February 13 News, South Korea’s law enforcement system has once again exposed vulnerabilities in digital asset management. The Seoul Gangnam Police Station confirmed that during an investigation in November 2021, Bitcoin was seized and stored, and recently it was discovered that the assets had been transferred from a USB cold wallet. Internal checks revealed that 22 bitcoins were involved, estimated at approximately $1.5 million at current prices, and police have confirmed this to the media.
According to disclosures, the physical USB drive of the cold wallet was not lost, but the on-chain assets were successfully transferred out. Due to the investigation being temporarily halted, this anomaly went unnoticed for a long time until a recent nationwide review of evidence and digital asset management uncovered the issue. After local media first reported it, public opinion questioned the law enforcement agencies’ mechanisms for safeguarding encrypted assets.
Currently, the Northern Gyeonggi Police Department has launched an internal investigation to clarify the transfer process, responsibility, and whether any internal personnel acted improperly. A police spokesperson only stated that the case is still under investigation and more details cannot be disclosed at this time.
It is noteworthy that this incident is not isolated. Previously, another region in South Korea discovered that 320 Bitcoin, which had been seized in a similar investigation, also went missing. Reports indicated that personnel responsible for evidence management mistakenly accessed a phishing website, leading to private key leakage and rapid asset transfer. These series of events highlight management shortcomings in traditional law enforcement when dealing with decentralized assets.
Industry experts point out that unlike cash or physical assets, digital assets’ security depends entirely on private key management and procedural compliance. Once risk controls are lacking, even assets stored in a “cold wallet” can suffer irreversible losses due to human error or system vulnerabilities. As South Korea tightens regulations on digital assets, such cases may drive the implementation of stricter evidence custody and auditing mechanisms.
The disappearance of these 22 bitcoins has become another warning in South Korea’s crypto enforcement history, emphasizing the importance of combining制度 and technology in the digital age.
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