Henry County’s sheriff and investigative staff delivered a detailed month-end report to the commission on Dec. 23, outlining public-safety operations, a multi-jurisdictional fraud investigation and expanded training initiatives.
In the report, investigators described a fraud matter they said involved substantial cryptocurrency theft. The transcript records the sheriff’s office stating: “We recently took a, fraud case where over $232,150,000 dollars was stolen out of cryptocurrency account.” Investigators said their unit traced funds and identified at least one suspect believed to be in the Chicago area; they also reported tracing activity linked to accounts and identifiers in Turkey and Indonesia and said subpoenas and coordination with federal partners were underway.
The sheriff’s office also reviewed enforcement and operational metrics (transcript references in-session figures such as 44 arrests, 379 traffic stops and multi-thousand annual call volumes) and described grant-supported equipment acquisitions, including two radar units awarded via a mini-grant and approximately $30,000 in overtime funds to support enforcement. Staff described a hazardous moving-violations grant cycle opening on Jan. 5, 2026, that could fund enforcement through 2026–27.
Training was a recurring theme: the office reported about 61 hours of in-house training in November across investigations, crime-scene procedures and physical training and highlighted completion of a 40-hour instructor-development class enabling staff to certify as statewide instructors.
Why it matters: The fraud investigation as presented involves large-dollar cryptocurrency tracing that will require interagency cooperation and may lead to criminal warrants and extradition requests. Training and grant receipts directly affect local enforcement capacity.
What’s next: Investigators said they will continue coordination with federal and international partners and that the county will seek grant renewals and implement planned training schedules through mid-2026.