Four arrested following $1.6 million NFT heist in the Netherlands — data carriers, cash, cars, and house also seized as part of ongoing investigation
One tip led the police to the house in Axel, but the arrested individuals were eventually released after interrogation.
Four suspects were arrested by Zeeland police in the Netherlands after the authorities received a tip that they were involved in the theft of 169 NFTs. According to Dutch newspaper Politie [machine translated], the three individuals from Axel and one from the neighboring Terneuzen have been interrogated by detectives but have since been released. Nevertheless, the police action also included the seizure of various data carriers and money, as well as three vehicles and the house itself where the raid was conducted.
The stolen NFTs were estimated to be worth 1.4 million Euros (around $1.65 million), which is indeed a massive amount. However, this is a tiny drop in the Ocean of stolen Bitcoin and other crypto, estimated to be worth $17 billion in 2025 alone. We should note that NFTs are not exactly the same as cryptocurrencies, but they both run on blockchain technology and can even be stored on the same wallets that keep Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the like.
The relative novelty of cryptocurrencies and NFTs means that many people get scammed when using these technologies, especially older people who are often tricked into depositing large amounts of cash into Bitcoin ATMs. But even those who are used to the system can fall victim, either through phishing, social engineering, malware, or seed phrase theft, among others.
The large values tied to NFTs and Bitcoin make them lucrative targets for hackers, with just one well-targeted heist able to net millions of dollars in profit. There was even a true-crime story about a group of hackers who stole 4,100 Bitcoins and lived a high-roller lifestyle for a short time, before everything devolved into assault and kidnapping, eventually attracting the attention of federal agencies.
Since NFTs are tokens and are stored in wallets, the suspected thieves didn’t perform a bank vault heist with guns blazing. Instead, it was done behind monitors and keyboards, where they likely targeted individuals using phishing websites, fake wallet apps, or even with compromised browser extensions. It also seems that the Zeeland authorities do not have enough evidence against the four individuals, as they were eventually released after their interrogation. Still, the seized items should hopefully assist the police in their investigation and eventually lead to the arrest and conviction of the real perps.
Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
-
Shiznizzle Banks now need to start taking a stronger stance against people who willingly give away large sums of money. They should not have to pay back anything because users are too stupid to see they are being scammed.Reply
Transfers of large sums should be prefaced with a screen stating that you are about to transfer large sums to who knows who and this is a one way street and an irreversible act. That should clear the banks from any responsibility.
Being smart and being able to make intelligent choices is not a prerequisite to owning money. Even idiots can own money. So if idiots make idiotic decisions when they are simply stupid and not of diminished capacity they should be made to eat such decisions and lose their money.
Owning money comes with responsibility. If you think it is a joke and hand over all your money since you are stupid then that is your choice. -
Moonstick2 Reply
Theft is theft. Not sure that making it legal to steal from stupid people is a cause many people have any interest in. (Theft and whether banks are obligated to return money are entirely different matters.) Plus everybody has their own ideas of what constitutes "stupid".Shiznizzle said:So if idiots make idiotic decisions when they are simply stupid and not of diminished capacity they should be made to eat such decisions and lose their money.
Owning money comes with responsibility. If you think it is a joke and hand over all your money since you are stupid then that is your choice.
It's got nothing to do with the actual story anyway which makes no mention of how the NFTs were obtained. The writer referenced the Bitcoin ATM thing in an attempt to make interesting an article which is basically no more than "Four people have been arrested for stealing NFTs." Kind of a scam itself.