The Australian federal police officer denies allegations of taking Bitcoin from a hardware wallet at the crime scene and transferring it to crypto exchange Binance.
According to a recent report, the Australian police found the hardware wallet during a drug raid at a residence but waited about three weeks to obtain court permission to access it. However, upon accessing the wallet, there was no Bitcoin at all, as federal agent William Wheatley allegedly transferred it out shortly after the raid.
The hardware wallet allegedly had 81.62 Bitcoin, valued at $309,000 at the time of the raid in 2019. However, it is worth approximately $4.2 million at the time of publication.
The suspicion came about as the police force also discovered a device containing the seed phrase to the hardware wallet, which is a sequence of 12 to 24 random words that can be used as a recovery method in case the wallet is stolen or lost.
Enforcement authorities around the world are adopting crypto-tracing software to tackle illicit activity with digital assets.
Meanwhile, Wheatley is pleading innocent against accusations of exploiting his position as a public officer for personal gain, theft, and involvement with proceeds of crime.#PeckShieldAlert 2023 saw 600+ major hacks in the crypto space, resulting in ~$2.61B in losses, with $674.9M recovered.
— PeckShieldAlert (@PeckShieldAlert) January 29, 2024
$1.51B lost to hacks (excluding #Multichain unauthorized withdrawals) & $1.1B to scams. This marks a 27.78% decrease from 2022. #DeFi protocols remained prime… pic.twitter.com/G7PIU3WyrX
He is reportedly prepared to contest the charges regarding the stolen Bitcoin from the Trezor wallet. This comes amid Trezor’s acknowledgment of a security breach affecting nearly 66,000 users.