On January 25, according to Caixin, in the case of Qian Zhimin's 60,000 BTC money laundering, the British prosecution still maintains that its suggestion to the court on October 15, 2025, to "provision certain assets for a comprehensive compensation arrangement for a large number of Chinese victims in civil recovery proceedings" is the most effective and realistic solution.
This means that once this asset (funds) quota is reserved, it can be transferred to China in cooperation with Chinese and British law enforcement agencies to implement specific victim compensation plans, providing compensation after verifying the victims' identities and losses. Under this pathway, it is unrealistic for Chinese victims to expect "satisfactory" high compensation based on Bitcoin's years of soaring prices. The implied compensation limit of this proposal, at most, refers to the actual losses that victims have already registered and confirmed with the Chinese police.





