Circle Faces Lawsuit Over $230M Crypto Hack, Accused of Failing to Freeze Stolen Funds

April 17, 2026
Circle Faces Lawsuit Over $230M Crypto Hack, Accused of Failing to Freeze Stolen Funds
  • A Massachusetts class-action lawsuit targets Circle Internet Group over the Drift Protocol hack, alleging the company failed to freeze roughly $230 million of USDC moved after the approximately $280 million exploit that drained a Solana-based exchange and spilled across blockchains to Ethereum via Circle’s CCTP.

  • Plaintiffs claim Circle had both the technical capability and contractual authority to intervene and freeze the stolen funds, but did not act during the seven- to eight-hour window when assets were moved and converted.

  • The case situates the Drift incident within broader debates about DeFi liability, operator discretion, and how crypto asset control is evolving amid active exploits.

  • advocates like ARK Invest’s Lorenzo Valente defend Circle’s choice to refrain from freezing without a legal order, framing it as avoiding arbitrary discretion while acknowledging the ongoing debate over the right approach.

  • The funds moved through ecosystems and were laundered, complicating enforcement and tracking as authorities and firms grapple with balancing rule-of-law constraints and immediate harms in hacks.

  • The lawsuit underscores concerns about centralized control over stablecoins and the potential security implications of cross-chain mechanisms during hacks.

  • The Drift incident triggered cascading effects, with losses and suspensions affecting at least 20 other DeFi protocols through indirect exposure.

  • Plaintiffs allege Circle aided and abetted conversion and negligence, seeking damages to be determined at trial and highlighting accountability questions when firms can intervene but cite regulatory limits.

  • The case references Circle having recently frozen 16 unrelated wallets nine days earlier in a sealed civil matter, suggesting the firm’s capability and willingness to act in certain contexts.

  • That prior action is cited to argue Circle could have frozen Drift-related assets, illustrating capabilities demonstrated in other scenarios.

  • Elliptic analyses indicate the exploit involved North Korean state-backed actors moving funds across chains, with conversions to ETH and routing through Tornado Cash to obfuscate the trail.

  • Drift announced a recovery package totaling up to $127.5 million from Tether and additional funding from other partners to support user recovery and Drift’s relaunch as a USDT-based perpetual DEX on Solana.

Summary based on 4 sources


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