
From Phishing to Forensics: DoJ Investigations into Crypto Wallet Hacks
Case-by-case look at indictments accusing individuals of wallet intrusions, asset theft, and the evolving use of traceability in prosecutions. WASHINGTON, DC, April 17, 2026 For

Case-by-case look at indictments accusing individuals of wallet intrusions, asset theft, and the evolving use of traceability in prosecutions. WASHINGTON, DC, April 17, 2026 For

Public indictments and settlements related to major exchange security failures, examining breach timelines, incident response, and investor restitution considerations. WASHINGTON, DC, April 17, 2026 The

An overview of recent DOJ criminal charges tied to crypto breaches, detailing charging theories, penalties, and what they signal for cyber deterrence. WASHINGTON, DC, April

An exact-match explainer on the chip-based passport systems that became a global standard in the post-9/11 era, and how they changed passport security from visual

One of the biggest public myths about black passports is that they automatically stop arrests, even though real diplomatic protection depends on recognized status, official

Burgundy passport covers became a visual marker of EU alignment and, in some cases, older socialist traditions, but the real meaning of the red passport

Red passports are often linked to Europe, socialist history, and the symbolism of collective state identity, but the real meaning of burgundy covers is broader,

A practical comparison of ordinary passports and diplomatic passports, focused on official status, border treatment, and the real legal limits that separate a black passport

Passport chip technology is now central to faster screening, identity matching, and fraud prevention worldwide, because the modern passport is no longer just a printed

How the modern passport chip stores its identity information, protects it against tampering, and helps authorized border systems verify travelers more quickly during inspection. WASHINGTON,

How RFID passport chip security protects digital passport data, supports fraud detection during modern border inspections, and turns today’s passport into a layered identity document

He slipped out of Philadelphia after a horrific crime in 2000, moved through Arizona under a false name, was deported before the forensic case fully

The Everman mother left Texas in 2023 as investigators closed in on the disappearance and presumed death of her young son, then stayed beyond local

The Kansas City fugitive entered one of the most feared criminal rosters in America in March 2007, then lost the only advantage most fugitives ever

He fled California after the 1987 murder of Karen Grace Winslett, remade himself as a chef and new husband in Utah, and came dangerously close

He was convicted, sentenced, and was supposed to report to prison in 1998. Instead, he drove toward New York, abandoned his car near JFK, and

The British conman spent years surviving on movement, aliases, and psychological domination, then lost his freedom in 2022 when a borderless European road network finally

The Sinaloa Cartel co-founder built his legend on distance, discipline, and invisibility, then lost it in a trap that did not unfold in the mountains,

In 1969, a 20-year-old Cleveland teller walked out with $215,000 in a paper bag. He was never caught alive. Instead, he became Thomas Randele, a

The Olympic Park bomber used mountain survival skills, isolation, and stolen food to stay off the grid in western North Carolina until an ordinary predawn

He walked into the surf off Daytona Beach in 1989, let the world believe he had drowned, and built a second life in North Carolina

He slipped out of Philadelphia’s orbit after the 2000 killing of a 5-year-old girl, served time in Arizona on unrelated charges, and was deported before

After killing two Nevada lawmen and escaping prison in 1923, Leonard T. Fristoe built a second life as Claude R. Willis, only to see it

The man known as the Unabomber lived in deep isolation, left almost no modern trail, and frustrated one of the biggest investigations in FBI history,

After murdering his family in 1971, John List vanished into a second life as Robert Clark, an accountant and churchgoing suburban husband, until a forensic