A 53-year-old Chinese Real Estate developer, Yang Weixin, has been killed in Cambodia by kidnappers who demanded $2 million in cryptocurrency from his wife. According to reports, the businessman lived in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, and his body was found in the Dangkor district.
A Crypto Ransom Situation
The victim was abducted a day before his body was found, with security footage of his apartment showing three unidentified men forcing him into a vehicle from the parking area on the night he was kidnapped. The kidnappers allegedly sent messages to the victim’s wife using his phone, demanding the crypto ransom.
Messages stopped reaching the wife’s phone after 9 a.m. the following morning, shortly before the police notified Weixin’s family that he had been found dead. The investigators suspect a quick escalation of the violence after finding blood, knives, tape, plastic ties, and other incriminating elements in and around the vehicle used to kidnap the victim.
What Investigators are Doing
Early findings suggested torture, beating, stabbing, and suffocation before the body and the vehicle were abandoned. According to investigators, the case is being treated as kidnapping, extortion, and homicide. The police are also digging into the victim’s business relationships to know whether an older business conflict could have been involved in the saga.
According to reports, Yang’s wife has already informed the police of an ongoing business dispute involving her husband that has lasted since 2014. The deal is with another Chinese national, and the pressure allegedly resurfaced in 2025. In the meantime, no motive has been established in that direction, and the police are continuing with the hunt for those directly involved with the kidnapping.
An Ungly Trend for the Crypto Industry
The Phnom Penh killing highlights a broader issue involving crypto crime encroachment into the wider society. Crypto-related crimes are increasingly moving beyond wallet drains, malware, fake apps, or exchange account takeovers. Criminals are tilting toward the narrative of using pressure to force people to unlock large digital assets.
Crypto ransom propagation has shaped recent coverage in Europe, with France dominating the infamous headline, with a surge in reported crypto wrench attacks. Criminals in the region have repeatedly used kidnapping, home invasion, and direct threats to force crypto owners into making significant transfers.
The case in Cambodia differs in location and victim profile. However, it follows similar mechanics, where attackers do not need to crack sophisticated codes, but simply identify high-value targets and try to extort them of their digital assets.
Related: Crypto Holders in California Face Rising ‘Wrench Attacks’
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