Los Angeles Times

Suspect in bitcoin heist flees Iceland jail

Alleged mastermind is seen on same flight to Sweden taken by the prime minister.

- Associated press

A prisoner in Iceland suspected of mastermind­ing the theft of about 600 computers that were being used to mine bitcoin and other virtual currencies escaped custody and f led Tuesday on a passenger plane that a witness said also carried the remote North Atlantic nation’s prime minister.

Police said surveillan­ce video showed a suspect they identified as Sindri Thor Stefansson boarding a flight to Sweden at Iceland’s internatio­nal airport in Keflavik. They said he traveled under a passport in someone else’s name.

“He had an accomplice,” Police Chief Gunnar Schram told Visir, an online news outlet. “We are sure of that.”

Investigat­ors think Stefansson left the low-security prison where he recently had been transferre­d through a window early Tuesday. Guards did not report him missing until after the flight to Sweden had taken off.

Stefansson was among 11 people arrested this year on suspicion of stealing the powerful computers in one of Iceland’s biggest thefts. The stolen equipment, which still is missing, has been valued at almost $2 million. Icelandic media have dubbed the case the “Big Bitcoin Heist.”

If the equipment is used for its original purpose — to create bitcoins — the thieves could turn a massive profit in an untraceabl­e currency without ever selling the computers.

The escapee was being held at the Sogn prison in rural southern Iceland, about 45 miles from the airport. The prison is unfenced and inmates have telephone and internet access.

Stefansson had been in custody since February. He was moved to the open prison 10 days ago, police said.

A passenger on the flight that the escaped inmate allegedly caught to Sweden told national broadcaste­r RUV that Iceland’s prime minister, Katrin Jakobsdott­ir, was also on the plane. Jakobsdott­ir was among five Nordic prime ministers who met with India’s prime minister Tuesday in Stockholm.

The prime minister’s presence, the witness said, was the only unusual thing about that flight.

The escape is yet another twist in a criminal case without parallel on the peaceful island nation with a population of 340,000 and one of the world’s lowest crime rates. Police commission­er Olafur Helgi Kjartansso­n said in March that it was “a grand theft on a scale unseen before.”

Police have arrested 22 people altogether, including a security guard, without solving the burglaries.

Blessed with an abundance of renewable energy, Iceland has emerged as a popular base for large virtual currency companies that use massive amounts of electricit­y running the computers that create bitcoins.

Owners of the stolen computers have, in a rare public outreach, promised a $60,000 reward to anyone who can lead detectives to the stolen computers.

Helgi Gunnlaugss­on, a sociology professor at the University of Iceland, said keeping a high-profile prisoner in such low-security surroundin­gs was unusual — but more so was his organized escape.

“Prison breaks in Iceland usually mean someone just fled to get drunk,” he said. “The underworld­s are tiny, and it is extremely difficult to hide, let alone flee the country.”

 ?? Egill Bjarnason Associated Press ?? COMPUTERS mine bitcoin in Keflavik, Iceland. Police arrested 11 people this year on suspicion of stealing such computers. One of them escaped Tuesday.
Egill Bjarnason Associated Press COMPUTERS mine bitcoin in Keflavik, Iceland. Police arrested 11 people this year on suspicion of stealing such computers. One of them escaped Tuesday.

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