South Korean swaps bitcoins for 2 mln euros in fake notes

AFP  |  Nice 

The deal sounded murky from the start: in exchange for worth two million euros (USD 2.3 million), the wealthy buyer would hand over the equivalent sum in cash in a luxury hotel on the French riviera.

The seller, a South Korean with a company specialised in the crypto-in Singapore, accepted the proposition nevertheless and met the Serbian buyer in July.

But once the transaction was completed in a hotel in the city of Nice, the South Korean realised the 500-euro notes he had been handed were crude, photocopied fakes, police sources told AFP.

After the victim filed a criminal complaint at the end of July, the Serbian man was arrested at a top-end hotel in the glitzy town of in the south of France, apparently living the high-life with a and a 100,000-euro watch. After appearing in court, he was remanded in custody on charges of fraud and being part of a organised crime network, his told AFP on Sunday.

Police are still looking for his alleged accomplice.

The South Korean said he had been approached by the men initially over a possible investment in his company.

The discussions led instead to the transaction that would see the South Korean transfer the to a foreign account in exchange for the cash. Regulators worldwide are grappling with the boom in crypto-currencies like bitcoin, which are known to be used by criminals for transactions and money-laundering.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, August 19 2018. 21:30 IST