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China’s ’Cryptoqueen’ Faces Jail Time in £5 Billion Bitcoin Scandal – The Rise and Fall of a Digital Dynasty

China’s ’Cryptoqueen’ Faces Jail Time in £5 Billion Bitcoin Scandal – The Rise and Fall of a Digital Dynasty

Published:
2025-11-11 05:35:48
16
3

From crypto royalty to orange jumpsuits—China's so-called 'Cryptoqueen' is getting a harsh reality check.

The scheme? A £5 billion Bitcoin operation that promised moon shots but delivered handcuffs.

How it unraveled: Regulators finally caught up with the digital grift, proving even decentralized dreams answer to centralized law.

Bonus finance jab: Another day, another crypto 'visionary' learning that blockchain doesn't make subpoenas disappear.

A billion-pound scam disguised as innovation

According to prosecutors, Qian masterminded an enormous pyramid-style investment scam through her company Lantian Gerui (translated as Bluesky Greet), founded in China in 2014.

The firm claimed to develop futuristic health technologies and mine cryptocurrency, attracting more than 120,000 investors across China, many of them middle-aged or elderly.

But the UK’s Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the company’s “profits” were fabricated, existing investors were paid with money from new ones, a hallmark of a Ponzi scheme. In total, victims’ deposits are estimated at over 40 billion yuan (£4.2 billion or $5.6 billion).

“The more information we got about her involvement… that she was actually the leader of the fraud, not just a lower-down member… it became obvious that yes, she’s very clever, very manipulative, able to persuade a lot of people,” said Detective Constable Joe Ryan of the Metropolitan Police.

Promises of wealth and patriotism

Lantian Gerui promised its clients they could “get rich while lying down.” Investors received small daily payouts to build trust, which convinced them to invest even more — often borrowing money to do so.

“They just pumped up our dreams… until we lost all self-control, all critical judgment,” said one investor, identified as Mr Yu, who lost his savings and later his marriage to the fallout.

The company also played on patriotism, holding lavish events and claiming to help China “become number one in the world.” According to victims, prominent figures — including the son-in-law of former leader Chairman Mao Zedong- appeared at events to endorse the scheme.

“Our patriotism was our Achilles’ heel, that’s what they exploited,” Mr Yu said.

The great escape to London

In mid-2017, as Chinese police began investigating Lantian Gerui, Qian fled the country using a fake passport and arrived in the UK.

She rented a £17,000-a-month mansion in Hampstead, north London, paid for by converting part of her crypto fortune into cash and property.

To facilitate her laundering, she hired Wen Jian, a former takeaway worker, as her personal assistant. Jian was later convicted of money laundering and sentenced to six years in prison. She told the court that Qian spent most of her days “lying in bed, gaming and shopping online.”

Qian, meanwhile, kept grand ambitions. Notes in her diary revealed her plan to “found an international bank, buy a Swedish castle,” and even to make herself “Queen of Liberland” — a self-proclaimed micro-nation on the Croatian-Serbian border.

Police raid and record crypto seizure

Her downfall came when Wen attempted to purchase a luxury property in Totteridge Common but was unable to explain the source of Qian’s funds.

That triggered a money-laundering investigation by the Metropolitan Police, which culminated in a raid on Qian’s Hampstead property in 2018.

Inside, officers found hard drives and laptops containing tens of thousands of Bitcoin, then worth hundreds of millions of pounds, and now valued at over £5 billion.

Police described it as “the single largest cryptocurrency seizure in UK history.”

Arrest and guilty plea

Qian managed to stay under the radar for several years before being arrested in York in April 2024. Officers also found four other Chinese nationals working illegally as her house staff, employed for cleaning, shopping, and security.

At first, Qian denied wrongdoing, claiming she was a victim of a Chinese government crackdown on crypto entrepreneurs. But during her trial in September 2025 at Southwark Crown Court, she abruptly changed her plea to guilty to charges of acquiring and possessing criminal property.

She now awaits sentencing, which began this week and is expected to conclude within days. Under UK law, she faces a maximum of 14 years in prison.

Victims plead for justice and compassion

Victims like Mr Yu are now hoping that British authorities will help them recover at least some of their stolen wealth.

“If we can gather all the evidence together, we hope the UK government, the Crown Prosecution Service and the High Court can show compassion,” he told the BBC.

“Because now, it’s only that haul of bitcoin that can return us a little bit of what we lost.”

However, restitution may prove complicated. Many investors sent money not directly to Qian’s company but through local intermediaries — making it difficult to trace individual claims.

A civil “proceeds of crime” case is set to begin in early 2026 to determine how the seized assets will be distributed. The CPS has also said it is exploring a compensation scheme for unrepresented victims, though details have yet to be confirmed.

Any unclaimed funds WOULD normally default to the UK government, leading to speculation that the Treasury could end up with billions if victims cannot substantiate their claims.

Human toll of a financial crisis

For many, the losses were life-shattering. Mr Yu said he knew victims who were left destitute, some unable to afford food or medical treatment.

One woman from Tianjin, he recalled, died of breast cancer after discharging herself from the hospital because she could no longer pay for care.

“Let us be pillars, holding up the sky / Rather than sheep, to be led and misled,” Mr Yu later wrote in a poem for her.

“To those who survive — strive harder, that we might right this grave injustice.”

What comes next

As the court prepares to hand down Qian’s sentence, the legal battle over the £5 billion Bitcoin fortune looms large. Thousands of Chinese victims, many elderly, are now mobilising through international legal teams to prove their claims.

For the UK, the case has become a defining moment in global financial crime enforcement, illustrating both the vast scale of cryptocurrency fraud and the moral dilemma of how to return stolen digital wealth that has multiplied many times in value.

Also Read: Russian Crypto Scammer Roman Novak Found Murdered in Dubai

    

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