70-year-old woman loses her crypto investments in LA wildfire
The devastating wildfire sweeping through Southern California has wiped out a 70-year-old Los Angeles resident’s home and her life savings, stored in cryptocurrency. The woman’s nephew, who shared her story on social media platform X, revealed that the private key to her crypto wallet was destroyed along with her home. According to X user Monty, […]
The devastating wildfire sweeping through Southern California has wiped out a 70-year-old Los Angeles resident’s home and her life savings, stored in cryptocurrency. The woman’s nephew, who shared her story on social media platform X, revealed that the private key to her crypto wallet was destroyed along with her home.
According to X user Monty, who broke the story of their aunt’s losses, the private key was written on paper and stored in the house. It was the sole means of accessing her digital assets.
My 70 year old aunt lost her apartment in the LA fires.
Most of her savings was in crypto and she lost her wallet and seed phrase, and doesn’t have any backups. (Yes bad setup I know, but it is what it is)
I feel sick. This was all she had.
— Monty (@montyreport) January 8, 2025
Without a backup or recovery phrase, the woman is permanently locked out of her crypto holdings, which Monty revealed consisted mostly of Bitcoin.
Not your keys, not your coins
Cryptocurrency private keys are the only way for a digital currency holder to access digital wallets and funds. These long strings of characters serve as the only “password” to a vault of digital wealth. If lost or destroyed, there is no recovery mechanism.
The 70-year-old woman’s loss birthed discussions about the risks associated with storing private keys. On Reddit, users in the r/CryptoCurrency community shared similar experiences, with one describing a six-figure Bitcoin loss after their key, written on a sticky note, was accidentally discarded during a move.
Another user recounted a friend’s private key, engraved on a metal plate, that they lost after a hurricane ravaged their home.
Many crypto holders rely on paper wallets, handwritten notes, or USB drives for offline security against hacking. However, these methods are highly vulnerable to physical disasters like fire, flooding, and theft.
Some crypto users take creative approaches, such as engraving private keys onto stainless steel plates or storing them in fireproof safes. Others turn to secret-sharing services, which split private keys into multiple fragments stored in separate locations.
Hardware wallets, which store keys offline, are considered a safer option, but even these require secure and disaster-resistant storage.
Even with such precautions in mind, no solution is entirely foolproof. The use of fireproof safes may protect keys from heat, but if a house is completely destroyed, locating the safe or accessing its contents could prove impossible.
Wildfires devastate families in Southern California
Recent updates from CNN show the ongoing wildfires have already scorched over 15,000 acres, engulfing areas like Malibu, Pacific Palisades, and Pasadena.
Among the countless victims are homeowners and businesses, including cryptocurrency companies in the Los Angeles region.
Swan Bitcoin, whose employees are based near Santa Monica, and BlockDaemon, a blockchain service provider headquartered in Los Angeles, are among the companies impacted.
Meanwhile, Altadena residents Walter and Yalda Seace shared their harrowing experience with CNN affiliate KABC after their home of 40 years was reduced to rubble by the Eaton Fire.
The fire, which has reportedly consumed nearly 13,700 acres and remains uncontained, left the couple grappling with the magnitude of their loss.
“We’re left with nothing,” Walter Seace told reporters. However, His wife Yalda hopes they will get an opportunity to rebuild. “It’s overwhelming, but we’ll get through it. Unfortunately, so many others are in the same situation. It’s devastating,” Yalda reckoned.
From Zero to Web3 Pro: Your 90-Day Career Launch Plan
What's Your Reaction?