There have been at least 100 physical attacks against Bitcoin holders or infrastructure facilitating BTC transactions, a recent list documenting all recorded attacks on June 12 shows. The list records all known physical attacks on BTC holders or facilities, including crypto ATMs, as early as 2014.
Over 100 Recorded Physical Attacks Against Bitcoin Holders
The list published on GitHub, a public code repository, and shared by Bitcoin supporter Jameson Lopp, the chief technical officer of Casa, shows that the first recorded attack on BTC was in 2014 when Hal Finney fell victim. Finney was one the first supporters of Bitcoin who was also in touch with Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious founder of the cryptocurrency.
According to circulated news on that day, Finney was “SWATed” after months of online harassment. Being “SWATed” is a cybercrime where the attacker reports a false crime to the police. The SWAT team responds and invades the alleged perpetrator’s home only to discover that the caller had lied about the crime.
In 2014, an unknown person attacked Finney and demanded 1,000 BTC in exchange for not releasing his personal information. Finney failed to pay, and the ransom attacker released his home address to the public while calling the police to say that the Bitcoin supporter wanted to kill himself. This was months before Finney passed away in August 2014.
Another notable event happened in 2015 when thieves in the Netherlands stole two Bitcoin ATMs. Two years later, in 2017, Lopp became a victim when he was “SWATed” and extorted for his Bitcoin.
In this case, the attacker called the police, alleging that not Lopp had shot his wife. The attacker had attempted to extort 100 Bitcoin, worth nearly $700,000, in late 2017 before deciding to have Lopp “SWATed.”
Crypto Is Digital And Transactions Traceable
There is a misconception among new users, thieves, or attackers that Bitcoin is a physical asset, more like cash that can be stolen. However, for attackers who failed to do their groundwork, including those who stole the crypto ATM in 2015, the digital nature of cryptocurrencies means coin holders must first approve a transaction by signing using their private keys.
Without private keys, the attacker cannot steal coins. Moreover, the transparent nature of crypto transactions advantages the victim since, on reporting the matter to law enforcement, their assets can be trailed.
On multiple occasions, hackers, especially of decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, have ended up reversing funds for risks of their identity being revealed due to the transparent nature of the underlying blockchains in Ethereum or the BNB Chain.
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															 Bitcoin
Bitcoin  Ethereum
Ethereum  Tether
Tether  XRP
XRP  BNB
BNB  USDC
USDC  Lido Staked Ether
Lido Staked Ether  Dogecoin
Dogecoin  TRON
TRON  Cardano
Cardano  Wrapped stETH
Wrapped stETH  Wrapped Bitcoin
Wrapped Bitcoin  Figure Heloc
Figure Heloc  Wrapped Beacon ETH
Wrapped Beacon ETH  Chainlink
Chainlink  Hyperliquid
Hyperliquid  Bitcoin Cash
Bitcoin Cash  Wrapped eETH
Wrapped eETH  Stellar
Stellar  Ethena USDe
Ethena USDe  USDS
USDS  Binance Bridged USDT (BNB Smart Chain)
Binance Bridged USDT (BNB Smart Chain)  LEO Token
LEO Token  Sui
Sui  WETH
WETH  Hedera
Hedera  Coinbase Wrapped BTC
Coinbase Wrapped BTC  Avalanche
Avalanche  Litecoin
Litecoin  WhiteBIT Coin
WhiteBIT Coin  Zcash
Zcash  Monero
Monero  Shiba Inu
Shiba Inu  Toncoin
Toncoin  Cronos
Cronos  USDT0
USDT0  Ethena Staked USDe
Ethena Staked USDe  Mantle
Mantle  Bittensor
Bittensor  Dai
Dai  Polkadot
Polkadot  MemeCore
MemeCore  World Liberty Financial
World Liberty Financial  sUSDS
sUSDS  Uniswap
Uniswap  Aave
Aave  Bitget Token
Bitget Token  OKB
OKB  USD1
USD1  Ethena
Ethena