Share this article

U.S. Crypto Investor Charged With Kidnapping and Torturing Victim Over Bitcoin

The investor,
John Woeltz, allegedly held an Italian man captive in a $30K-a-month townhouse to steal his crypto.

Updated May 26, 2025, 6:11 p.m. Published May 26, 2025, 11:23 a.m.
Police cruiser with lights on at night  (Kenny Eliason/Unsplash)
(Kenny Eliason/Unsplash)

What to know:

  • A U.S. cryptocurrency investor has been charged with kidnapping, assault, and illegal gun possession after allegedly holding a 28-year-old Italian man captive.
  • The victim was subjected to physical and emotional abuse in a bid to get him to give the attackers access to his bitcoin.
  • The Italian man ended up escaping and flagging down a police officer, leading to the attackers' arrest.
  • The incident is part of a growing trend of physical attacks and kidnappings targeting individuals in the cryptocurrency industry.

A U.S. cryptocurrency investor is facing criminal charges after allegedly kidnapping and torturing a man in Manhattan for weeks in an attempt to steal his bitcoin .

John Woeltz, 37, was arraigned on Saturday on multiple charges, including kidnapping, assault, and illegal gun possession, after he held a 28-year-old Italian man captive in a luxury townhouse, authorities say.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the State of Crypto Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The Italian man traveled to New York earlier this month and was lured to a five-story rental in the NoLiTa neighborhood, where prosecutors say Woeltz and an unidentified accomplice began abusing him to get his crypto wallet credentials.

The townhouse, rented for at least $30,000 a month, became the site of a weeks-long ordeal. Prosecutors say the victim was beaten, shocked with electric wires, and threatened at gunpoint.

At one point, he was dangled over a staircase railing and told he would be killed if he didn’t give in. He was also warned his family would be harmed, the New York Times reports.

The victim escaped Friday morning, flagging down a traffic officer after fleeing the house. Police arrested Woeltz at the scene and discovered Polaroid photos showing the abuse, along with weapons and other torture equipment.

A second person, Beatrice Folchi, was also arrested, while a third suspect remains at large.

This attack is part of a troubling pattern: the cryptocurrency industry has seen dozens of physical assaults this year alone. In one recent case, the daughter and grandson of Pierre Noizat, CEO of crypto platform Paymium, were targeted in an attempted kidnapping caught on video and posted online.

That attempt failed, but earlier in the same city, a crypto millionaire’s father was abducted and had a finger severed before being rescued.

In yet another incident, David Balland, co-founder of hardware wallet maker Ledger, and his wife were kidnapped from their home. They were later rescued by authorities, and a paid ransom was seized.

More For You

Hong Kong regulator approves first crypto company license since June

Hong Kong (Manson Yim/Unsplash, modified by CoinDesk)

Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) granted Victory Fintech a license.

What to know:

  • Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) granted a crypto license to Victory Fintech (VDX).
  • There are now 12 approved platforms on the SFC's registry of approved crypto firms.
  • The regime has a reputation for being one of the strictest among major financial jurisdictions.