India Law enforcement has yet to make any public announcement regarding the arrest. The arrest connects back to a major breach disclosed by Coinbase in mid-2025, in which hackers reportedly bribed outsourced support personnel to extract sensitive customer data. The breach, which affected tens of thousands of users and triggered at least one class-action lawsuit, was traced to agents working for TaskUs, a Texas-based business process outsourcing (BPO) firm with centers in India.
According to disclosures, the attackers were unable to access private keys or passwords. However, the stolen customer information was sufficient to carry out targeted social engineering attacks, where victims were impersonated and persuaded to hand over access to their accounts. Coinbase warned that remediation, reimbursements, and security upgrades related to the breach could cost the company around four hundred million dollars. Reports also indicated that the attackers attempted to extort Coinbase for $20 million, threatening to further exploit the stolen data.
Separately, U.S. authorities recently arrested Ronald Spektor, a 23-year-old Brooklyn resident, in connection with a widespread phishing and impersonation scam that targeted Coinbase users. Prosecutors in Brooklyn charged Spektor with orchestrating a scheme that allegedly stole nearly $16 million in cryptocurrency from about 100 Coinbase users nationwide by impersonating Coinbase support representatives and convincing victims that their assets were at risk. The Coinbase case highlights how social engineering, rather than direct system hacks, has emerged as one of the most effective attack vectors against crypto users in 2025.
- Global Cooperation in Crypto Regulation Stressed by FCA Official and British Lord at DigiAssets 202
- Hong Kong Expands Integration with China’s eCNY CBDC
- The First Gas Station Starts Accepting Bitcoin in Canada
- London Stock Exchange to Start Trading Crypto Exchange Traded Notes on May 28
- 48% of Central Banks Plan to Issue CBDC Within 5 Years
- Brazilian Judge Allows NFT Subpoenas to Bitcoin Wallets in High-Profile Fraud Cases






























































































































