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April 6, 2025 by Haider Ali
- Police and Gowling WLG launch a civil recovery scheme to help fraud victims reclaim stolen crypto.
- The initiative improves coordination between police, victims, and legal experts to fight fraud.
- Updates to the Proceeds of Crime Act enable more effective freezing and recovery of digital assets.
The City of London Police teams up with Gowling WLG to run a civil asset recovery program after using cryptocurrency to help a fraud victim retrieve their £2 million in digital assets during their pilot project.
This scheme exists to restore money to fraud victims especially those with cryptocurrency losses even when criminal charges cannot be pursued. This joint effort will help police teams work better with both fraud victims and their legal support while going after stolen money.
Through our successful pilot project, we are delighted to work with the City of London Police to facilitate money recovery for people victimized by financial frauds, as Bríd Holden from Gowling WLG explains in a statement.
UK Boosts Crypto Recovery After Major Losses
Based on crypto fraud reaching $9.9 billion losses around the world during 2024 the partnership aims to change how people report scams and increase public awareness of fraud prevention. Detective Chief Inspector Craig Mullish confirms that victims must endure financial losses to sour their future lives permanently.
Effective asset recovery services benefit UK victims directly while breaking the operations of criminal groups that work in the nation. The government views cryptocurrency-related civil asset recovery as a growing essential method to fight crime.
The authorities made this announcement during their latest success in cryptocurrency asset confiscations. In the previous week British police teamed up with lawyers to return more than 670000 dollars in stolen cryptocurrency to an 80-year-old victim.
The authorities used updated powers from the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 to put a freeze on the stolen digital assets during their operation. The British police and private sector legal experts view the legislative update as a critical step toward better working relationships for recovering stolen cryptocurrency.
UK Law Firm Struggles With Crypto Cases
Wealth Recovery Solicitors faced court allegations last September for a £635,000 crypto fraud after evidence showed they did not have the necessary skills to handle defrauded digital assets. The company wanted to block all Blockchain.com access globally because it displayed the Bitcoin address linked to stolen funds on its website.
Ashley Fairbrother handles the case against Wealth Recovery Solicitors as a partner at Edmonds Marshall McMahon, which participated in the recent £520,000 crypto recovery. Fairbrother highlights the new City of London Police and Gowling WLG collaboration as an essential move toward defending against widespread fraud in the UK.
Fairbrother believes joint projects and teamwork offer our best chance to deal with growing fraud issues. The police forces ought to make cryptocurrency fraud partnerships with every private law sector firm to fight modern cybercrime that changes quickly.
Through Section 303Z51’s addition in the Proceeds of Crime Act the government created vital progress but Fairbrother believes police need to become the primary focus to establish these partnerships and defend victims.
He stated that taking these actions protects our nation from fraud while decreasing the financial burden on victims and helps police catch criminal groups who steal digital currency.