Armed Intruders Demand Crypto Access in Fake Food Delivery Home Invasion Case

CN
2 hours ago

Key Takeaways:

    • A food delivery ruse allegedly helped attackers get a resident to open the front door.
    • Armed intruders held victims captive while demanding access to crypto accounts, prosecutors say.
    • The case shows how crypto holders can face real-world threats beyond cybercrime.
  • Digital wealth can become a physical vulnerability when criminals believe crypto sits within reach. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois reported June 10 that an eighth defendant was charged in a home invasion in Winnetka, an affluent suburb north of Chicago, tied to cryptocurrency access.

    Federal prosecutors describe a robbery that began with a fake food delivery on the afternoon of March 8. After someone opened the front door, men armed with loaded firearms forced their way inside, held an adult captive for about an hour, and restrained a child who arrived during the invasion.

    Prosecutors stated:

    “The captors allegedly demanded access to a safe, computer, and online accounts holding cryptocurrency.”

    Federal filings describe the intruders searching the residence while holding the victim captive. Prosecutors say the group sought access to cryptocurrency accounts, a safe, and computer equipment during the robbery.

    The charging documents frame the invasion as a robbery aimed at both physical property and account access. Prosecutors say the defendants sought cryptocurrency, money, and other valuables through force, threats, and restraint, blending a traditional armed robbery with a search for access to digital assets.

    Federal filings divide the case between people accused of entering the home and others accused of helping nearby. Prosecutors say five men entered with loaded firearms, while others waited outside, communicated with the captors, and met them after they fled the residence.

    The eight defendants are Andrew Franklin, Dashun Brown, David Franklin, Anthony Ramsey, Isaiah Dukes, Khiell Dukes, Jalen Chambers, and Tyrese Fenton-Watson. Prosecutors connect them through claimed roles involving the staged delivery, armed entry, victim restraint, outside coordination, communications during the invasion, and meetings after the group left.

    Federal prosecutors stated:

    “Kidnapping conspiracy is punishable by a maximum sentence of life in federal prison, while robbery conspiracy is punishable by up to 20 years.”

    The case highlights a concern for crypto holders: Digital assets can attract the same threats that target cash, jewelry, and other valuable property. According to prosecutors, the attackers sought access to online accounts as well as physical valuables inside the home.

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