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Yao Qian's corruption details exposed! Accepted 2000 ETH as bribe, bought a $20 million mansion
CCTV exposes former Digital Currency Research Institute director Yao Qian’s corruption, with virtual currencies hidden in office hardware wallets. Yao Qian helped project IC0 raise 20,000 ETH, received 2,000 ETH as a thank-you fee, and in 2021, at the Ethereum peak, converted 370 ETH worth about 10 million RMB to buy a Beijing villa worth 20 million. The investigation used four-layer fund penetration to trace back the chain to the coin traders.
The Innocence and Ruin of Hardware Wallets Hidden in Offices
Yao Qian’s corruption methods caused shock in the crypto community. He stored the bribe cryptocurrencies in a hardware wallet kept in his office drawer. This approach was seen as naive and ironic by crypto insiders—a senior official who once led China’s digital currency research believed that hardware wallets could provide absolute anonymity. Hardware wallets do indeed store private keys offline, preventing hacker attacks, but they cannot hide on-chain transaction records and fund flows.
Yao Qian, through subordinate Jiang Guoqing, a key intermediary, received a benefit transfer of 12 million RMB from businessman Wang. A more significant transaction occurred in 2018, when Yao Qian helped a project team get in touch with an exchange to raise 20,000 ETH via ICO, and the project later paid 2,000 ETH as a thank-you fee. At Ethereum’s high point in 2021, these 2,000 ETH had a maximum market value of 60 million RMB.
In 2021, Yao Qian exchanged 370 ETH for about 10 million RMB to buy a Beijing villa registered under a relative’s name. Ironically, this 20 million RMB villa was never lived in until his downfall in 2024, as it was still under renovation during that period. After the incident, someone commented: “This really shows that (Yao Qian) is willing to risk his life for money.” The irony of this corruption is that a former official who set digital currency regulations ultimately fell due to abusing the same technology for bribes.
Three Major Methods of Yao Qian’s Corruption
Offline storage in hardware wallets: Storing bribe ETH in office drawer hardware wallets to evade monitoring
Mule account money laundering: Using multiple accounts under relatives’ names to receive and transfer funds, creating fund breakpoints
Batch cash-out strategy: Holding 2,000 ETH but only cashing out 370, attempting to reduce suspicion of individual transactions
Yao Qian’s downfall began with abnormal activity in relatives’ accounts. Investigators found that while his own accounts appeared normal, cross-checking with accounts under relatives’ names revealed suspicious large fund flows. Through four layers of fund penetration, they identified the coin trader who transacted with him that year, then traced back the entire fund chain. This case proves that no matter how advanced encryption technology is, as long as funds flow into the real world, traceable clues will remain.
Three Breakthroughs in Cryptocurrency Tracking Technology
A statement from the CCTV special report sparked concern in the crypto community: “When virtual assets finally become real assets, they become very easy to expose.” This reveals the fundamental logic of crypto tracking technology—not tracking on-chain transactions per se, but focusing on the interface between the crypto world and the real world. The Yao Qian case exposed three major breakthroughs in current cryptocurrency tracking technology.
First is the continuous improvement of regulatory rules. In the past, when cryptocurrencies operated solely on-chain, regulators lacked data, making it impossible to establish links or penetrate. At that time, anonymity was indeed prevalent. But over the years, regulations have been constantly refined, forcing institutions to complete KYC (Know Your Customer). Now, almost all centralized exchanges are required to implement strict identity verification, providing key data sources for law enforcement.
Second is the accumulation of data from centralized exchanges. As these exchanges amass more data and regulations improve, law enforcement agencies’ investigative requirements are generally met. Once core exchange data is obtained, many issues can be resolved, especially the core problem of identifying the owners of on-chain addresses. In the Yao Qian case, tracking the exchange records of coin traders was crucial to restoring the full fund chain.
Third is the continuous enhancement of on-chain tagging and tracking technology. A complete on-chain fund linkage and penetration mechanism has now formed, built gradually by industry security personnel through marking addresses. This results in a network of address data. For example, in a criminal case involving coin-related crimes, the initial address A can be broken into 10 addresses, some of which go to exchanges, others to DeFi projects, all of which can be gradually tagged on-chain. If tagged addresses deposit funds into exchanges, they can be quickly frozen; some DeFi platforms may also block swap behaviors of tagged addresses.
The Disillusionment of Cryptocurrency Anonymity and Asset Security Lessons
From a technical perspective, identifying who owns an on-chain address is no longer that difficult. After years of accumulated data, it’s clear that we are no longer able to hide in the face of big data. On-chain and off-chain can be penetrated and correlated; exchanges can de-anonymize identities. Technically speaking, cryptocurrencies are no longer as anonymous as before.
However, this does not mean ordinary users need to panic. Investigation experts have also stated clearly that as long as you do not get involved in cases, these issues will not happen to you. The key is to protect your accounts and social circles, and avoid dealing with illicit funds and coins. Many issues depend on whether you are a clean person. Many users lack awareness of asset security and account safety; how to protect your account from triggering exchange risk controls is also a learned skill.