Three successful recoveries have returned 1,500 BTC to Irish authorities, but access to roughly 4,500 BTC still depends on unlocking dormant wallets safely. TheThree successful recoveries have returned 1,500 BTC to Irish authorities, but access to roughly 4,500 BTC still depends on unlocking dormant wallets safely. The

Irish Authorities Recover Third Batch of Bitcoin from Convicted Drug Trafficker’s Lost Wallets, Now Totaling US$92 Million

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  • Irish authorities have completed a third Bitcoin recovery linked to Clifton Collins, taking total seized assets to 1,500 BTC with Europol providing technical support.
  • The case demonstrates how recovering illicit cryptocurrency depends not only on tracing blockchain activity but also on obtaining access to lost private keys.
  • Around 4,500 BTC remains in nine untouched wallets, leaving most of the original holdings still beyond investigators’ control.

A further 500 Bitcoin connected to convicted Irish drug trafficker Clifton Collins has been recovered by Irish authorities, taking the total seized in the long-running case to 1,500 BTC valued at more than US$92 million (AU$133.40 million). The latest recovery alone is worth close to US$31 million (AU$44.95 million).

The operation was led by Ireland’s Criminal Assets Bureau with support from Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre, which supplied specialist decryption capabilities, technical expertise and coordinated operational meetings for investigators.

Authorities have now recovered Bitcoin from three of the 12 wallets that originally held 6,000 BTC obtained through proceeds from cannabis cultivation and drug trafficking. Earlier recoveries of 500 BTC each took place in March and May after investigators gained access to the wallets.

Related: Bitcoin Falls Below $60K as Tech Selloff Deepens Crypto Bear Market

Recovery Efforts Still Going On 

The investigation highlights the technical complexity of crypto asset recovery, where blockchain records can reveal wallet balances and movements but investigators still need access to private keys before taking custody of the funds. Recovering access to older wallets may require blockchain forensics, recovered storage material and cryptographic techniques.

According to reports, Collins, a former beekeeper, accumulated Bitcoin during 2011 and 2012 while it traded for only a few dollars per coin. His private keys were reportedly kept at a rented property in County Galway before being lost after the property was emptied when he entered prison for five years in 2017.

On-chain records show approximately 4,500 BTC, currently worth more than US$275 million (AU$398.75 million), remain in the nine unrecovered wallets, meaning most of the original holdings have yet to be accessed.

Related: Strategy May Offload $1.25B in Bitcoin as Its Funding Model Cracks

The post Irish Authorities Recover Third Batch of Bitcoin from Convicted Drug Trafficker’s Lost Wallets, Now Totaling US$92 Million  appeared first on Crypto News Australia.

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