South Korea Police Seized Crypto Rules: Report

South Korea’s national police agency is drafting new guidelines for handling seized cryptocurrency, a policy shift reportedly triggered by the discovery that 22 Bitcoin from a 2021 criminal case had been transferred out of police custody.

The Korean National Police Agency prepared a “Virtual Asset Seizure Management System Improvement Plan,” Seoul Economic Daily reported on February 24. The plan was submitted to lawmaker Chae Hyun-il and covers four stages: preparation, seizure, storage, and transfer to prosecutors.

Seoul Metropolitan Police Commissioner Park Jeong-hyun said a separate management guideline for seized cryptocurrency would be sent to frontline units, according to NewDaily reporting from February 23.

What South Korea Police Say the New Seized Crypto Rules Will Cover

The reported framework introduces monthly monitoring of seized virtual assets, a measure absent from existing procedures. Police also plan to establish separate rules governing seizure and storage, along with a dedicated field manual for officers handling crypto evidence.

The manual would reportedly cover deposit and withdrawal suspension, seizure execution, storage protocols, transfer to prosecutors, asset return, and provisional return. This stage-by-stage approach marks a departure from general evidence-handling rules that were designed for physical items.

Police are also pursuing outsourced custody through licensed virtual asset service providers, the reporting indicates. This would move seized crypto out of ad hoc wallet arrangements and into regulated third-party infrastructure.

The underlying draft text of the improvement plan has not been made publicly available. The exact legal force, final wording, and implementation timeline remain unclear from accessible reporting.

Why the Guidelines Are Being Drafted After the 22 BTC Custody Failure

The immediate catalyst was the discovery that 22 Bitcoin submitted as evidence in a 2021 case at Gangnam Police Station had been transferred out of custody. Local reports valued those coins at roughly 2.1 billion Korean won at current prices.

Rep. Chae Hyun-il noted that current management rules “remain focused on physical evidence,” a framework that does not account for the unique properties of digital assets. Unlike cash or seized goods, cryptocurrency can be moved instantly, anonymously, and irreversibly if wallet access is compromised.

Police seizure data underscores how small but growing the caseload has been: 2 cases in 2021, 8 in 2022, 6 in 2023, 5 in 2024, and none reported so far in 2025. Even with limited volume, the Gangnam incident demonstrated that a single control failure can result in significant financial loss.

The low case count also suggests that formal procedures have lagged behind because crypto seizures were rare enough to handle informally. As digital asset cases become more common across law enforcement globally, the gap between physical-evidence rules and crypto-custody requirements becomes harder to ignore. South Korea’s police response follows a pattern seen in other jurisdictions where institutional frameworks for digital assets are being built reactively after high-profile failures.

Bull and Bear Read on What the Draft Means for Crypto Enforcement

On the constructive side, tighter chain-of-custody controls and regular monitoring could improve the credibility of South Korean crypto enforcement. If police adopt licensed custodians and standardized procedures, the risk of evidence loss or tampering drops substantially.

Clear rules also benefit defendants and asset owners. Standardized return and provisional-return procedures reduce the chance that seized assets are mishandled or indefinitely held without accountability, a concern that extends beyond South Korea to broader regulatory environments adapting to digital finance.

The bear case centers on execution risk. The promised rules are not yet fully public, and reporting has not confirmed whether custody outsourcing has formally begun. Without a published police order carrying legal force, frontline units may continue relying on informal wallet handling.

There is also no public indication of whether the new framework will extend beyond police to prosecutors or tax authorities, who face similar custody challenges once assets are transferred. A guideline limited to one stage of the legal process leaves gaps downstream.

Whether these draft rules translate into effective practice depends on publication of the final text, training rollout to field units, and formal engagement with licensed custodians. Until those steps are confirmed, the improvement plan remains a reported intention rather than an operational reality.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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