South Korea’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol has pledged an urgent review of how public institutions manage confiscated cryptocurrencies following a major security lapse.
The announcement came days after the National Tax Service (NTS) inadvertently exposed a wallet seed phrase in an official press release, leading to the temporary theft of millions in digital assets.
The incident has intensified scrutiny over the government’s digital asset custody practices and accelerated calls for regulatory reform.
On February 26, 2026, the NTS issued a press release detailing the seizure of 8.1 billion won (approximately $5.6 million) from high-value tax evaders. The announcement included high-resolution photographs of confiscated Ledger hardware wallets.
One of the images reportedly displayed a handwritten mnemonic recovery phrase placed next to a device associated with a taxpayer identified as “Mr. C.” The exposed seed phrase enabled anyone viewing the image to reconstruct the wallet.
Within hours, an unknown individual used the phrase to access the wallet. After depositing a small amount of Ethereum (ETH) to cover transaction fees, the actor transferred approximately 4 million PRTG tokens, valued at roughly $4.8 million, out of the account.
According to reports, a man surrendered to the Korean National Police Agency on March 1, 2026, claiming he accessed the funds out of curiosity. Authorities stated that the assets were restored to their original state following the incident.
Despite the recovery, the breach exposed vulnerabilities in how public agencies handle sensitive cryptographic materials and public communications.
Minister Koo stated that the government will “promptly establish and implement measures to prevent recurrence.” Proposed steps include strengthening digital asset management procedures across all public institutions that handle seized crypto.
Authorities also plan to conduct a nationwide audit of government crypto holdings. The review follows not only the NTS incident but additional custody failures, including the loss of 22 BTC from a Gangnam police vault and other mishandling cases at a prosecutors’ office.
The reforms are expected to align with a monitoring system introduced by the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office in February 2026. That system mandates instant alerts for any unauthorized movement of seized digital assets.
The breach has renewed urgency around South Korea’s pending Digital Asset Basic Law, which is expected to be submitted later in 2026. Lawmakers and regulators have argued that clearer institutional-grade custody standards are necessary as crypto seizures become more common in tax and criminal enforcement cases.
The incident underscores a fundamental reality of digital assets: possession of a recovery phrase equates to full control. For government agencies managing confiscated crypto, operational security is not optional but foundational.
As authorities move toward tighter controls and legal clarity, the episode may serve as a catalyst for formalizing state-level crypto custody frameworks in South Korea.
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