
Two Texas brothers pleaded guilty in a federal case tied to the armed robbery of a Minnesota family and the theft of more than $8 million in cryptocurrency.
Summary
- Two Texas brothers pleaded guilty to robbery after an armed $8 million crypto kidnapping case.
- Prosecutors said the victims were held for nine hours while crypto was transferred under threat.
- The case adds to rising global wrench attacks targeting crypto holders and their family members.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota announced the pleas on June 18.
Isiah Angelo Garcia, 25, and Raymond Christian Garcia, 24, both of Waller, Texas, pleaded guilty to one count each of Interference with Commerce by Robbery. Prosecutors said each man faces up to 20 years in federal prison. Sentencing dates have not yet been set.
Guilty pleas follow armed crypto robbery
According to the Justice Department, the Garcia brothers traveled from Texas to Minnesota in September 2025 to carry out the robbery. Prosecutors said they held a family at gunpoint in their home in Grant, Minnesota, while demanding access to crypto accounts.
The defendants admitted in their guilty pleas that they used firearms to threaten the victims and help carry out the robbery. They also agreed to pay more than $8 million in restitution.
“The guilty pleas entered today reflect our commitment to holding the defendants accountable for the choices they made,” U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen said.
Prosecutors describe hours-long ordeal
Court records said the robbery began on Sept. 19, 2025. Prosecutors said the brothers zip-tied the victim, his wife and his son, and held the family at gunpoint for more than eight hours.
Isiah Garcia then took the main victim to a family cabin in northern Minnesota, where prosecutors said he forced him to retrieve extra crypto storage devices. The brothers ultimately forced the transfer of more than $8 million in digital assets.
The victim’s son later called 911 when one of the suspects left the home. Deputies found the wife and son still zip-tied inside the house. Investigators also found a disassembled AR-15-style rifle, ammunition and other items near the property.
Evidence led police back to Texas
The Justice Department said investigators used items left near the home to identify the suspects. Earlier charging documents said a Wendy’s receipt, rental car records, motel records and video surveillance helped track the brothers after they fled Minnesota.
Police arrested the brothers in Texas on Sept. 22, 2025. Prosecutors said Isiah Garcia later admitted that he and his brother drove to Minnesota, held the family at gunpoint and forced the crypto transfer.
The case moved from state charges to a federal case. The brothers were originally charged in Washington County, Minnesota, with kidnapping, robbery and burglary counts before the federal prosecution moved forward.
Case adds to wrench attack concerns
The guilty pleas come as law enforcement and security firms track more physical attacks against crypto holders. These attacks are often called wrench attacks, a term used when criminals rely on force, threats or kidnapping to steal digital assets.
As previously reported by crypto.news, France has faced a wave of crypto-linked abductions and attempted kidnappings in 2026, including a failed attack involving the wife of The Sandbox co-founder Sébastien Borget. The same report said security experts urged crypto holders to reduce public exposure and improve personal safety.
CertiK reported 34 verified wrench attack cases worldwide between January and April 2026, with estimated losses of about $101 million. Its earlier 2025 report counted 72 verified physical coercion incidents, up 75% from 2024.
The Minnesota case forms part of a wider pattern of physical crypto crime tracked by law enforcement and security firms. Prosecutors will next seek sentencing in federal court. Until then, both brothers remain convicted by guilty plea and await punishment.
