Polish prosecutors are now investigating losses exceeding €82.8 million ($97 million) as several hundred users have filed complaints, a number that grows daily after withdrawals stalled in mid-April 2026. CEO Przemysław Kral left for Israel on or around April 17-18, where he holds citizenship. Poland and Israel have no extradition treaty covering economic crimes.
- Polish prosecutors investigate Zondacrypto after CEO Przemysław Kral fled to Israel following the halt of customer withdrawals in April 2026.
- The exchange lacks access to 4,500 Bitcoin valued at $350 million because private keys disappeared with founder Sylwester Suszek in 2022.
- Regulatory arbitrage allowed Zondacrypto to use an Estonian license to bypass Polish oversight while serving several hundred thousand domestic users.
The Locked Wallet at the Center
Kral revealed in April that Zondacrypto has no access to a cold wallet holding roughly 4,500 Bitcoin, currently valued between $330 million and $350 million. The private keys, he said, belong to founder Sylwester Suszek, who disappeared in March 2022 and is presumed dead by Polish authorities.
That gap stayed hidden for four years. The platform continued marketing itself as secure and expanding sponsorships while customer assets sat locked behind cryptography only Suszek possessed.
Michał Binkiewicz, spokesman for Polish prosecutors, told local media on April 21: “We are currently talking about several hundred people, but this number is constantly growing as more complainants come forward.” He added that the reported amount of approximately 350 million zloty “is constantly growing.”
The company’s three-member supervisory board, Veronika Togo, Guido Buehler, and Georgi Džaniašvili, only discovered the crisis when media began reporting on vanishing Bitcoin reserves. They resigned immediately, citing “material inconsistencies” that made it impossible to carry out their duties.
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👉 Submit Your PREstonian License, Polish Customers
Zondacrypto operated under an Estonian VASP license while serving a predominantly Polish user base. This regulatory arbitrage allowed it to avoid tighter Polish supervision that might have caught the missing wallet years ago.
Suszek founded the exchange as BitBay in 2014. In 2021, he sold the business to a US investor, and it rebranded as Zondacrypto. Management passed to Kral, under whom the firm expanded through sponsorships and partnerships across sports and media.
Several months after the sale, on March 10, 2022, Suszek drove to a gas station in Czeladź, a small industrial city in southern Poland, and disappeared. His fate remains unknown, and the case is still under investigation.
Kral claims Suszek never handed over the private key to the 4,500 Bitcoin wallet before his disappearance. There is no public evidence that anyone at Zondacrypto under Kral’s leadership ever formally requested the key or documented attempts to recover it.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk alleged in an April 18 parliamentary speech that Zondacrypto’s financial success was “rooted not only in Russian money linked to one of Russia’s most powerful mafia groups, but also to the Russian security services.” Tomasz Siemoniak, Poland’s Minister for Security Services, claimed funds linked to the platform’s ownership were used to fund political and public initiatives linked to the right-wing opposition.
Chain Street’s Take
This is not your usual exchange blow-up but a textbook case of how EU passporting and light-touch licensing in one member state create blind spots across borders. Zondacrypto promised MiCA readiness while a quarter billion dollars of Bitcoin sat inaccessible for years. Apparently no one with real oversight noticed.
The political noise and dramatic escape to Israel will dominate headlines. But the deeper failure is structural. As MiCA rolls out fully, regulators must confront whether fragmented licensing still leaves room for this kind of collapse.
Polish users are paying the price right now. Other European markets should treat this as an early warning. If a CEO can hold Israeli citizenship and dodge extradition while running a major exchange, the regulatory framework has a hole big enough to drive a cold wallet through.
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