Man pleads guilty in failed ransom plot that may have been linked to 
		$240M crypto heist
		
		 
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		 [January 10, 2025]  
		By DAVE COLLINS 
		
		HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A Florida man pleaded guilty Thursday in 
		connection with the carjacking and kidnapping of a Connecticut couple, 
		in what authorities called a failed ransom plot that may have been 
		linked to a $240 million cryptocurrency heist. 
		 
		Michael Rivas, 19, of Miami, was one of six men arrested after a series 
		of events in Danbury on Aug. 25. He pleaded guilty to kidnapping and 
		conspiracy charges in federal court in Hartford. Two others are expected 
		to enter similar pleas in the same court on Friday. 
		 
		The couple were driving in a new Lamborghini SUV when the suspects 
		forced them out of the SUV, assaulted them, put them in a van and bound 
		them, police said. Witnesses immediately alerted police. Four of the men 
		were arrested after abandoning their vehicles including the van and 
		fleeing on foot, while the other two were later taken into custody at a 
		nearby home the group had rented through Airbnb, authorities said. The 
		couple were injured but survived the ordeal. 
		 
		Rivas, dressed in a tan prison uniform with his legs shackled during the 
		hearing, apologized for his actions. He said it was a “dumb” decision to 
		help one of his co-defendants carry out what he called a “vendetta.” He 
		did not elaborate. 
		 
		His lawyer, Brian Woolf, said Rivas accepted a co-defendant’s invitation 
		to take part in the plot with the hope of getting a share of the ransom 
		money, and he regrets that decision. 
		 
		The plot was hatched because the suspects “believed the victims’ son had 
		access to significant amounts of digital currency,” and they planned to 
		demand a ransom from the son to be paid in digital currency,” according 
		to a federal indictment. 
		 
		Just a week earlier, at least two thieves had stolen $240 million worth 
		of Bitcoin in an elaborate scam over the internet and by phone, and then 
		went on an indulgent spending spree on cars, mansions, travel, jewelry 
		and nights out at clubs, authorities said. 
		 
		Publicly, federal prosecutors and agents have not definitively linked 
		the kidnapping to the Bitcoin theft. Officials have declined to comment 
		on possible connections between the two cases including how the six 
		suspects knew the couple's son had a large amount of digital currency. 
		
		
		  
		
		But federal agents told Danbury police that the FBI was looking into 
		whether the couple's son was involved in the Bitcoin theft, Danbury 
		Detective Sgt. Steven Castrovinci told The Associated Press. Neither 
		Danbury police nor federal authorities have named the couple or their 
		son. 
		 
		Assistant U.S. Attorney Ross Weingarten declined to comment after 
		Thursday's court hearing. 
		 
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		In mid-September, federal prosecutors announced that the two men, Malone 
		Lam, 20, and Jeandiel Serrano, 21, had been indicted on charges of 
		conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to launder monetary 
		instruments in connection with the cryptocurrency theft. 
			
		Court documents say unnamed coconspirators were in on the scam with the 
		two men. Their lawyers have not responded to requests for comment. 
		 
		Prosecutors said in court documents that Lam, Serrano and the unnamed 
		coconspirators posed as technical support staff for Google and a 
		cryptocurrency exchange while contacting the victim of the theft with an 
		offer to help him with a supposed security breach. 
		 
		The victim, from Washington, D.C., believed them and gave them remote 
		access to his computer on Aug. 18. That resulted in the alleged thieves 
		making off with more than 4,100 Bitcoin, then valued at more than $240 
		million, prosecutors said. That amount of Bitcoin is now worth nearly 
		$380 million. 
			
		
		  
			
		According to prosecutors, Serrano, of Los Angeles, admitted during an 
		interview with federal investigators that he used the stolen currency to 
		buy three automobiles, worth more than $1 million in total, as well as a 
		$500,000 watch. He also said he had about $20 million of the victim’s 
		currency and agreed to transfer the funds to the FBI, authorities said. 
		 
		Meanwhile Lam, a citizen of Singapore who had addresses in Los Angeles 
		and Miami, Florida, was spending hundreds of thousands of dollars a 
		night at Los Angeles night clubs and acquiring custom Lamborghinis, 
		Ferraris and Porsches, prosecutors said. He also was renting two Miami 
		mansions, bought a $2 million watch and had a Lamborghini Revuelto worth 
		more than $1 million. 
		 
		Federal prosecutors said in court documents that at least $100 million 
		of the stolen funds remained missing. 
		 
		Exactly a week after the crypto theft, the couple from Danbury, a city 
		of more than 80,000 people along the New York border, were forced out of 
		their SUV in their hometown after one of the carjackers’ vehicles 
		rear-ended them and two other vehicles surrounded them. The group 
		assaulted the man with a baseball bat and dragged the woman by her hair 
		as they put them in the van, where the couple were bound with duct tape, 
		police said. 
		 
		“I’m deeply remorseful for my irresponsible behavior,” Rivas told U.S. 
		District Judge Sarala Nagala on Thursday. “I should have known better.” 
		 
		“This is not what my parents taught me growing up,” he added. 
		 
		Rivas and the other five men also are facing kidnapping and assault 
		charges in Connecticut state court. The other men are also from Florida. 
		 
		Sentencing was set for May 13. The prosecution and defense agreed on 
		sentencing guidelines that call for about 11 to 14 years in prison. 
			
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