LONDON — A 47-year-old Chinese citizen, Zhimin Qian, has pleaded guilty at Southwark Crown Court for her role in a vast Bitcoin fraud that drew in more than 128,000 victims. Known to some as the “goddess of wealth.”
She pleaded guilty to acquiring and possessing criminal property, including more than 61,000 bitcoins now valued at over £5 billion ($6.7 billion). The Metropolitan Police seized the Bitcoin in 2018, marking the largest law enforcement crypto recovery on record.
The verdict caps a seven-year international investigation into online investment scams, cross-border laundering, and the use of cryptocurrency to hide assets. Officials say it highlights how bitcoin, once seen as a challenge to traditional banking, has become a draw for organized crime.
“This conviction sends a clear signal: the UK is not a safe haven for criminals and their ill-gotten gains,” Security Minister Dan Jarvis told the BBC. “Money laundering erodes trust, undermines our economy, and fuels serious organised crime.”
Qian’s scheme took root on Chinese investment forums between 2014 and 2017. Using names such as Yadi Zhang, she posed as a market expert and targeted older investors, mostly retirees aged 50 to 75, as reported by Lifeweek in China. Her pitch was slick and persuasive, with glossy videos, supposed testimonials, and claims of guaranteed high returns from wealth products that were said to be safe.
Behind the front sat a classic Ponzi set-up. Early payouts were made using funds from new investors. Victims handed over sums from hundreds of thousands to tens of millions of yuan, often their life savings.
Cash to Bitcoin
Chinese officials later estimated losses at more than 30 billion yuan, about £3.2 billion at the time. When pressure mounted in 2017, Qian converted much of the cash into bitcoin, using the pseudonymous nature of the asset to move value across borders. She built a hoard of 61,000 BTC as prices climbed from roughly $1,000 per coin in 2017 to above $110,000 today.
Qian left Beijing using a forged St Kitts and Nevis passport and slipped into the UK. She chose London for its property market and the ease, in her view, of moving crypto wealth into assets. She lived in Hampstead and looked to turn bitcoin into bricks and mortar. Jian Wen, a 43-year-old former takeaway worker who moved to the UK in 2007, became her front. Wen was convicted last year and jailed for six years and eight months.
In September 2018, the pair tried to buy luxury homes in London using funds routed through crypto exchanges and cash deals. Wen said the money came from a “Chinese employer,” but that claim fell apart under scrutiny. Prosecutors outlined rapid movements of funds, wallets hopping from platform to platform, and high-value properties under review, while Qian stayed in a rented mansion as detectives drew closer.
The case broke after a tip about suspicious crypto activity reached the Met’s Economic and Cybercrime Command in early 2018. Detective Chief Inspector Will Lyne led a specialist team that traced blockchain links back to Qian’s operation in China, working with Beijing’s officers in a rare example of UK and Chinese cooperation.
“This was no ordinary fraud; it was a digital fortress,” Lyne said after the plea. “We pierced it with forensic accounting, AI-driven pattern recognition, and old-fashioned detective work.”
Armed Officers Stormed Home
Armed officers raided Qian’s Hampstead property in September 2018. Inside the lavish home, they found encrypted devices and hardware wallets that held the 61,000 bitcoins. At the time, the stash was worth about £1.4 billion.
Its present value is about five times higher, a sign of bitcoin’s wild swings. Qian was arrested at the scene. Wen was detained soon after and later admitted to laundering 150 BTC worth £1.7 million through property.
Qian’s guilty plea brought the trial to an abrupt end on day one, but the court still heard from the victims. Statements sent by video link from China told of ruined pensions and broken families. One widow in her seventies spoke of losing everything and falling into debt.
“She promised us security in old age,” the woman said. “Instead, she stole our futures.” Chinese prosecutors, who had requested an Interpol red notice for Qian in 2017, called the outcome a long-awaited result.
The Crown Prosecution Service said the case shows how criminals turn to cryptocurrency to hide wealth. “Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies are increasingly weaponised by fraudsters to disguise assets and reap the rewards of crime,” said CPS deputy chief Robin Weyell.
“This case illustrates the obscene scale of proceeds at their disposal, and our resolve to dismantle it.” The seizure eclipses other major recoveries, including the 2022 US case linked to the Bitfinex hack, where $3.6 billion was recovered.
Attention now turns to what happens next. The government could sell the bitcoins, as Germany did last year, or try to return funds to victims in China, which would be a complex process.
Qian will be sentenced next month and could face up to 14 years in prison. Detectives say the work continues. “We’ve only scratched the surface of crypto crime,” Lyne warned. “As bitcoin’s value soars, so do the stakes.” In a world where a single wallet can hold a fortune, this case stands as a sharp warning that no stash is beyond reach.