Buy some bitcoin, lose a finger
Among the many nonsensical claims made by bitcoin advocates is the claim that bitcoin is especially secure. Thanks to the magic of cryptography, they say, you don’t need to trust banks or governments to keep your money safe:[1]
Bitcoin is censorship resistant and confiscation resistant. If you take possession of your private Bitcoin keys, no one can access that wealth unless you give them permission.
I disagree. Bitcoin is confiscation-prone, not confiscation-resistant, thanks to a confiscatory technology that humanity has used for millennia: physical violence. The bad guys can confiscate your wealth by torturing you until you surrender your private keys.
Table 1 shows recent incidents where criminals used violence in an attempt to obtain bitcoin or other cryptocurrency. Just this month, the father of a crypto investor was abducted in Paris and had his finger severed.
Bitcoin advocates claim that bitcoin is better than real estate:[2]
The properties associated with bitcoin make it an ideal store of value: The supply is finite, it is easily portable, divisible, durable, fungible, censorship resistant and noncustodial. Bitcoin is rarer, more liquid, easier to move … It can be sent anywhere in the world at almost no cost and at the speed of light. On the other hand, real estate is … very difficult to liquidate …
The above passage describes the ideal properties of a ransom payment, not a store of value. You don’t want to own things that attract criminals, so I’d recommend against owning bitcoin, suitcases of unmarked bills, or bricks of cocaine. In contrast, residential real estate (“very difficult to liquidate”) is seldom used as a method of ransom payment.
The recent wave of violence might give impetus to the institutionalization of crypto. Since private keys are dangerous, some holders may switch to other instruments, such as exchange-traded funds. Unfortunately, getting rid of your private keys is not enough; what matters is whether criminals think you have them, not whether you actually have them.
Table 1: Violent cryptocurrency crimes
Date | Location | Victim | Crime |
March 2019 |
Netherlands | Bitcoin trader | Torture with a power drill[3] |
September 2022 to July 2023 | U.S. | Various victims in Florida, New York, North Carolina, and Texas | Home invasion[4] |
October 2023 |
U.S. | Family in Chicago | Kidnapping[5] |
August 2024 |
U.S. | Parents of alleged cybercriminal | Kidnapping[6] |
November 2024 |
Canada | Crypto CEO | Kidnapping[7] |
December 2024 |
Belgium | Wife of crypto investor | Kidnapping[8] |
January 2025 |
France | Crypto entrepreneur, wife | Kidnapping, severed finger[9] |
May 2025 |
France | Father of crypto entrepreneur | Kidnapping, severed finger[10] |
A case in Connecticut illustrates the dangers of owning bitcoin.[11] A teenager allegedly helped steal $240M of bitcoin, and subsequently bought a Lamborghini. In August 2024, his parents were driving it when they were abducted by six masked men. The criminals abandoned the Lamborghini, but kept the parents for ransom (the police later rescued the parents unharmed). So if you are looking to own something that criminals don’t want, I’d suggest a Lamborghini instead of bitcoin.
Coinbase tells its customers that “As long as you — and only you — have access to your private key, your funds are safe.”[12] It suggests an air-gapped wallet, for an “additional layer of security against potential hacks.”[13] Unfortunately, there’s one kind of hacking that air-gapped wallets cannot prevent, and that’s a thug who threatens to hack off your finger. This threat, also known as “rubber hose cryptanalysis,” is an inherent weakness of bitcoin.
As the price of bitcoin rises, the incentive to use violence to obtain bitcoin also rises. And that leads me to another downside of bitcoin: the possibility of a “majority attack” or “51% attack,” as mentioned in the original bitcoin whitepaper. With enough computing power, hostile actors can hijack the bitcoin payment system. Such an attack would not require violence, and might even be legal.
Budish (2025) argues that the incentive to launch a majority attack is the “Achilles heel of permissionless consensus.” According to Budish, bitcoin’s price must have a natural ceiling, because if the price gets high enough, a majority attack is certain to occur. Although violence is not required, physically attacking bitcoin miners to disable or seize their capacity might be helpful, as mentioned by Makarov and Schoar (2021).
Bitcoin cannot protect your wealth. You need a more powerful technology, a technology devised by history’s greatest thinkers, a technology that’s able to lift entire nations out of poverty and chaos. It is called “the rule of law.”
The rule of law is the only thing that enables wealth preservation, as discussed by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations:
It is only under the shelter of the civil magistrate that the owner of that valuable property, which is acquired by the labour of many years, or perhaps of many successive generations, can sleep a single night in security. He is at all times surrounded by unknown enemies, whom, though he never provoked, he can never appease, and from whose injustice he can be protected only by the powerful arm of the civil magistrate continually held up to chastise it. The acquisition of valuable and extensive property, therefore, necessarily requires the establishment of civil government.
Of course, some countries do not have strong legal systems that protect property rights, and perhaps in those countries, it makes sense to own bitcoin. But in the countries listed in Table 1, what’s the benefit of bitcoin?
It’s just not true that bitcoin’s technology can transcend the pedestrian institutions of government. Sometimes you need the state to step in with police and courts. Unlike cryptography, the rule of law allows you to retain your wealth as well as all ten fingers.
Endnotes
[1] “Bitcoin: Solving The Elusive Monetary Problem,” Bitcoin Magazine, May 6, 2021.
[2] “Why Bitcoin Is The Ultimate Wealth Preservation Technology,” Bitcoin Magazine, November 22, 2022.
[3] “Bitcoin trader brutally tortured with drill in cryptocurrency robbery,” The Independent, March 5, 2019.
[4] “Man Convicted of Violent Home Invasion Robberies to Steal Cryptocurrency,” U.S. Department of Justice, June 25, 2024.
[5] “6 men accused of kidnapping family from Chicago townhouse and forcing a transfer of $15 million in cryptocurrency,” Chicago Tribune, February 11, 2025.
[6] “Historic bitcoin theft tied to Connecticut kidnapping, luxury cars, $500K bar bills,” CNBC, October 17, 2024.
[7] “High bitcoin price may have played role in Toronto crypto CEO's kidnapping: experts,” CBC, November 8, 2024
[8] “Father of crypto entrepreneur rescued from kidnappers after having finger severed,” CNN, May 4, 2025.
[9] “Father of crypto entrepreneur rescued from kidnappers after having finger severed,” CNN, May 4, 2025.
[10] “Father of crypto entrepreneur rescued from kidnappers after having finger severed,” CNN, May 4, 2025.
[11] “They Stole a Quarter-Billion in Crypto and Got Caught Within a Month,” The New York Times, April 24, 2025.
[12] “What is a private key?,” Coinbase. References to this and other companies should not be interpreted as recommendations to buy or sell specific securities. Acadian and/or the author of this post may hold positions in one or more securities associated with these companies.
[13] “What is an air-gapped wallet?,” Coinbase.
References
Budish, Eric. "Trust at scale: The economic limits of cryptocurrencies and blockchains." The Quarterly Journal of Economics 140, no. 1 (2025): 1-62.
Makarov, Igor, and Antoinette Schoar. "Blockchain analysis of the bitcoin market." Available at SSRN 3942181 (2021).Legal Disclaimer
These materials provided herein may contain material, non-public information within the meaning of the United States Federal Securities Laws with respect to Acadian Asset Management LLC, Acadian Asset Management Inc. and/or their respective subsidiaries and affiliated entities. The recipient of these materials agrees that it will not use any confidential information that may be contained herein to execute or recommend transactions in securities. The recipient further acknowledges that it is aware that United States Federal and State securities laws prohibit any person or entity who has material, non-public information about a publicly-traded company from purchasing or selling securities of such company, or from communicating such information to any other person or entity under circumstances in which it is reasonably foreseeable that such person or entity is likely to sell or purchase such securities.
Acadian provides this material as a general overview of the firm, our processes and our investment capabilities. It has been provided for informational purposes only. It does not constitute or form part of any offer to issue or sell, or any solicitation of any offer to subscribe or to purchase, shares, units or other interests in investments that may be referred to herein and must not be construed as investment or financial product advice. Acadian has not considered any reader's financial situation, objective or needs in providing the relevant information.
The value of investments may fall as well as rise and you may not get back your original investment. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance or returns. Acadian has taken all reasonable care to ensure that the information contained in this material is accurate at the time of its distribution, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of such information.
This material contains privileged and confidential information and is intended only for the recipient/s. Any distribution, reproduction or other use of this presentation by recipients is strictly prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient and this presentation has been sent or passed on to you in error, please contact us immediately. Confidentiality and privilege are not lost by this presentation having been sent or passed on to you in error.
Acadian’s quantitative investment process is supported by extensive proprietary computer code. Acadian’s researchers, software developers, and IT teams follow a structured design, development, testing, change control, and review processes during the development of its systems and the implementation within our investment process. These controls and their effectiveness are subject to regular internal reviews, at least annual independent review by our SOC1 auditor. However, despite these extensive controls it is possible that errors may occur in coding and within the investment process, as is the case with any complex software or data-driven model, and no guarantee or warranty can be provided that any quantitative investment model is completely free of errors. Any such errors could have a negative impact on investment results. We have in place control systems and processes which are intended to identify in a timely manner any such errors which would have a material impact on the investment process.
Acadian Asset Management LLC has wholly owned affiliates located in London, Singapore, and Sydney. Pursuant to the terms of service level agreements with each affiliate, employees of Acadian Asset Management LLC may provide certain services on behalf of each affiliate and employees of each affiliate may provide certain administrative services, including marketing and client service, on behalf of Acadian Asset Management LLC.
Acadian Asset Management LLC is registered as an investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Registration of an investment adviser does not imply any level of skill or training.
Acadian Asset Management (Singapore) Pte Ltd, (Registration Number: 199902125D) is licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore. It is also registered as an investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Acadian Asset Management (Australia) Limited (ABN 41 114 200 127) is the holder of Australian financial services license number 291872 ("AFSL"). It is also registered as an investment adviser with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the terms of its AFSL, Acadian Asset Management (Australia) Limited is limited to providing the financial services under its license to wholesale clients only. This marketing material is not to be provided to retail clients.
Acadian Asset Management (UK) Limited is authorized and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority ('the FCA') and is a limited liability company incorporated in England and Wales with company number 05644066. Acadian Asset Management (UK) Limited will only make this material available to Professional Clients and Eligible Counterparties as defined by the FCA under the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive, or to Qualified Investors in Switzerland as defined in the Collective Investment Schemes Act, as applicable.