Zurich Police Seize CHF 800,000 in Major Crypto Catfishing Scam

Zurich prosecutors have uncovered a crypto catfishing scam, blocked a crypto wallet on a trading platform in the Seychelles and seized digital assets worth more than CHF 800,000 after tracing the proceeds of a romance fraud case.

On 26 May 2026, Zurich police released a statement saying the money had been frozen after specialist investigators traced the trail from a Winterthur-area victim who had been cheated out of almost CHF 200,000.

The case began with a complaint in January 2025, when the woman reported that unknown perpetrators had drawn her into a so-called romance scam and extracted nearly CHF 200,000. Zurich cantonal police say cyber specialists were able to trace the stolen funds through a string of digital transactions until they reached a wallet on a trading platform in the Indian Ocean archipelago.

 The public prosecutor’s office was able to fully reimburse the romance scam victim from the Winterthur district for the amount stolen.

Read More: Why Swiss Rents are Rising Faster Again: Raiffeisen Q2 2026 Report – Helvetica Times

The Winterthur Crypto Catfishing Scam Victim Has Been Reimbursed In Full

Working with the public prosecutor’s office, investigators blocked the account in November 2025 and later transferred the crypto to an official wallet for confiscation. The authorities said the success of the operation allowed prosecutors to reimburse the crypto catfishing scam victim in full, returning around CHF 200,000.

Zurich police have repeatedly warned that romance scams often rely on emotional manipulation and urgent requests for transfers, and this case shows that once money enters crypto channels, recovery depends on fast reporting and technical tracing.

The case comes as Zurich authorities continue to intensify their anti-crypto crime work. In late 2025, the canton’s prosecutors and police also dismantled a large Bitcoin mixer operation that allegedly laundered more than a billion francs in criminal proceeds. Together, the cases show that Swiss law enforcement is increasingly targeting both the frontline scams and the crypto infrastructure used to hide the money.

Read More: Is Zurich’s Economy Cooling? 25,817 Unemployed as Global Tensions Hit Hiring Outlook – Helvetica Times

Five Arrested in April 2026 as Police Dismantle International Crypto Money Laundering Ring

In a massive coordinated effort spanning multiple countries, the Zurich Public Prosecutor’s Office and Cantonal Police have dismantled an international money-laundering network. In April 2026, over 100 police officers conducted 7 house searches in Switzerland and 1 in Germany, leading to the arrest of 5 individuals. All arrested are managing directors of an international financial services provider.

According to the Zurich Police statement released on 11 May 2026, “The accused are charged with systematically transferring millions of euros of illicit funds abroad over several years.”

“The money originated primarily from fraud and drug trafficking and was concealed during the transfers using a sophisticated system involving cryptocurrencies and fictitious documents.”

The illicit funds are traced back to fraud and drug trafficking. The Zurich-led operation worked directly with the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Europol, and German law enforcement, coinciding with parallel raids in France, Greece, and Nigeria.

Three suspects are currently in pretrial detention, with a fourth awaiting extradition.

Akriti Seth
About the Author

Akriti Seth

Akriti Seth is a Zürich-based editor with more than a decade of experience, anchored by foundational training at Bloomberg. As a journalist, she covers global affairs, financial markets and technology. Her career has taken her from television studios to digital newsrooms. She has reported as an on-air correspondent for Channel NewsAsia and covered markets, corporate finance and business strategy for Informa UK. Her work has appeared in Entrepreneur Magazine, Hindustan Times, Yahoo Finance, TradingView, the Crypto Council for Innovation, DailyCoin, Tech Panda and more. She founded Helvetica Times to bring independent, English-language journalism to Switzerland — serving the expats, international professionals and global readers who want Swiss news reported with clarity and rigor.

View all articles