BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptonews /
Exclusive: South Korean Police Officer Faces Charges in $509K Crypto Scandal – Trust Issues Deepen

Exclusive: South Korean Police Officer Faces Charges in $509K Crypto Scandal – Trust Issues Deepen

Author:
Cryptonews
Published:
2025-06-11 23:30:00
12
2

Badge, meet betrayal. A South Korean police officer just got busted in a half-million-dollar crypto fraud probe—proving even the ‘trusted’ can’t be trusted when digital gold is involved.

Behind the Badge: How a Cop Allegedly Played the System

Details are still emerging, but here’s what we know: the officer allegedly exploited their position to siphon $509K in crypto assets. No fancy DeFi hacks or smart contract exploits—just old-fashioned abuse of power. The irony? They were probably supposed to investigate these kinds of crimes.

Crypto’s Trust Paradox Strikes Again

This case nails crypto’s eternal contradiction: a system designed to cut out middlemen keeps getting hijacked by the very people meant to protect it. Banks get mocked for their ‘security theater,’ but at least their employees don’t usually walk off with half a mil.

What’s Next?

Expect mugshots, resignations, and yet another round of ‘regulation is coming’ handwringing. Meanwhile, the crypto markets won’t even blink—$509K is just another Tuesday in whale territory.

South Korean Police: ‘Crypto Fraud’ Officer Facing Prosecution Investigation

The unit began investigating the matter earlier this year, after receiving multiple complaints about the officer.

Incheon, South Korea.

Incheon, South Korea. (Source: Vincent van Zeijst [CC BY-SA 4.0])

The Incheon Metropolitan Police Agency responded by suspending the officer. A spokesperson for the agency told the media outlet:

“We can confirm that we have received several complaints about this police officer. However, we cannot reveal any more details about the [alleged] crime.”

In April, the same media outlet reported that a group of nine complainants claimed the Senior Superintendent had caused damages worth approximately 1.7 billion won ($1.2 million).

At the time, the news outlet wrote that the number of related complaints was “increasing” as the probe continues.

Crypto-related crime is on the rise in Incheon. The city has seen a sharp increase in USDT-related over-the-counter thefts this year.

A court complaint has been filed with the Constitutional Court of Korea to examine whether the Seoul courts’ recent decisions to delay President Lee Jae-myung’s criminal trials were constitutional.https://t.co/5sG1qxAOPB

— The Korea Herald 코리아헤럴드 (@TheKoreaHerald) June 11, 2025

USDT Thefts on Rise in Incheon

Police say a growing number of crypto traders are agreeing to cut-price deals for USD-pegged stablecoins after speaking in open chatrooms on chat apps like KakaoTalk and Telegram.

In many cases, these deals turn out to be bogus. Thieves often trick their victims before running off with thousands of US dollars’ worth of cash.

Elsewhere in the country, a branch of the Seoul High Court has granted bail to Ahn Sung-hyun, the former South Korean golf pro accused of bribing crypto exchange officials to help list altcoins.

Yonhap reported that the court placed a travel ban on Ahn. It also ordered him to pay a surety bond of 50 million KRW ($36,493).

A Seoul court approved a request by actor Kim Soo-hyun’s agency to seize two apartments owned by Kim Se-ui, the operator of YouTube tabloid Hoverlab, amid an escalating legal battle between the parties.https://t.co/YIFzGyegrB

— The Korea JoongAng Daily (@JoongAngDaily) June 11, 2025

Ahn is most famous as the husband of K-pop star Sung Yu-ri. Sung is a former member of the chart-topping all-female group Fin.K.L. The golfer was convicted of embezzlement in December last year.

A district court judge jailed Ahn for four years and six months. His legal team has appealed the verdict.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users