Two high school students from San Luis Obispo County, California, have been charged with multiple felonies after allegedly traveling more than 600 miles to Scottsdale, Arizona, in an attempted cryptocurrency robbery valued at $66 million.
The suspects, aged 16 and 17, are accused of targeting a home in Scottsdale’s Sweetwater Ranch neighborhood on January 31, 2026, after allegedly believing the occupants controlled a digital wallet holding tens of millions of dollars in crypto.
According to investigators, the teenagers allegedly posed as delivery drivers, wearing UPS- or FedEx-style uniforms to gain access to the residence. Once inside, they reportedly restrained a couple using duct tape and zip ties, demanding access to the digital wallet they believed contained the cryptocurrency.
The robbery attempt unraveled after the victims’ adult son, who was hiding in another room, managed to contact emergency services. When police arrived, the suspects allegedly fled the scene in a vehicle equipped with stolen license plates.
Officers later apprehended the teens after the vehicle drove into a dead-end street, where both suspects were arrested at gunpoint.
During questioning, one of the teenagers reportedly told investigators that they were recruited and extorted through the encrypted messaging application Signal. The alleged recruiters, using the aliases “Red” and “8,” are said to have provided the victims’ address and supplied $1,000 to purchase equipment for the operation.
That money was allegedly used for disguises and a 3D-printed firearm, according to investigators.
The Scottsdale Police Department confirmed that both suspects will be tried as adults, despite being minors.
Each teenager faces eight felony charges, including:
Both suspects were released on $50,000 bail and are required to wear ankle monitors while awaiting further court proceedings.
The case adds to a growing number of so-called “wrench attacks”, a term used to describe incidents where physical violence or coercion is used to force victims to transfer digital assets.
Security researchers reported 70 such attacks in 2025, up sharply from 41 incidents in 2024. Experts say the trend is frequently linked to data breaches that expose the home addresses of high-net-worth cryptocurrency holders, increasing their vulnerability to real-world attacks.
The Scottsdale incident highlights the expanding intersection between digital wealth and physical security risks, as large crypto holdings increasingly make individuals targets outside the blockchain itself. Law enforcement agencies continue to warn that private key security must now be considered both a cybersecurity and personal safety issue.
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