South Korea's Supreme Court Moves To Seize Cryptocurrency for Unpaid Debts; 16M Holders Face New Legal Exposure

South Korea's Supreme Court published proposed amendments to the Rules of Civil Execution on July 2, creating a standardized framework for courts to freeze and seize cryptocurrency to satisfy civil debts. Public consultation runs through August 11, with the rules scheduled to take effect on October 1.

Under the framework, a court-issued seizure order would immediately block debtors from transferring digital assets, and exchanges would be required to hand them to court enforcement officers. Creditors can receive crypto directly or obtain permission to liquidate it through registered service providers. The rules cover both exchange-held assets and custody accounts, and allow officers to swap illiquid altcoins for more liquid tokens before selling. The amendments apply to a market where over 16 million people, roughly one-third of South Korea's population, hold cryptocurrency accounts. Self-custody wallets remain outside the framework's reach, presenting an enforcement challenge the current amendment does not fully resolve.

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