Close Menu
AsiaTokenFundAsiaTokenFund
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoin
  • Web3
    • Blockchain
  • Trading
  • Regulations
    • Scams
  • Submit Article
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA
What's Hot

XRP Could Reach $5, But Ozak AI Prediction Is Catching the Market’s Eye

November 1, 2025

Cardano Price Prediction November 2025: Whale Accumulation Signals a Rebound to $1

November 1, 2025

Crypto Hacks Drop 85% in October as Market Faces Historic $20 Billion Crash

November 1, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
AsiaTokenFundAsiaTokenFund
ATF Capital
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoin
  • Web3
    • Blockchain
  • Trading
  • Regulations
    • Scams
  • Submit Article
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA
AsiaTokenFundAsiaTokenFund

Multichain Wins Ruling to Freeze $63M in Stolen USDC

0
By Aggregated - see source on October 31, 2025 Blockchain
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Journalist

Hassan Shittu

Journalist

Hassan Shittu

About Author

Hassan, a Cryptonews.com journalist with 6+ years of experience in Web3 journalism, brings deep knowledge across Crypto, Web3 Gaming, NFTs, and Play-to-Earn sectors. His work has appeared in…

Share

Last updated: 

October 31, 2025

Multichain Liquidators Win Key Ruling as New York Court Extends Freeze on Stolen USDC

A New York bankruptcy court has granted provisional relief to Singapore-based liquidators overseeing the collapse of Multichain Foundation Ltd., directing stablecoin issuer Circle to keep wallets holding millions of dollars in stolen USD Coin (USDC) frozen.

Judge David S. Jones of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York issued the order on Thursday, extending the freeze on three Ethereum wallets tied to the July 2023 Multichain hack.

The ruling requires Circle to maintain the addresses on its blacklist, effectively blocking any movement of the roughly $63 million in stolen USDC until further notice.

The court’s decision marks a major step in the cross-border effort to recover assets drained from Multichain’s cross-chain bridge protocol, which lost more than $210 million in one of 2023’s largest DeFi exploits.

Inside the Multichain Case: How Liquidators Win by Freezing USDC

The order, issued under Section 1519 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, allows temporary relief before a foreign case receives formal recognition under Chapter 15, the framework that governs cooperation between U.S. courts and foreign insolvency proceedings.

Source: Cornell Law School

Liquidators appointed in Singapore, from KPMG Services Pte. Ltd., filed for provisional relief on October 23, arguing that lifting Circle’s freeze could cause “immediate and irreparable harm” by allowing stolen assets to move beyond recovery.

The request sought to preserve the funds until the U.S. court determines whether to recognize the Singapore case as a “foreign main proceeding,” a designation that would allow the liquidators to pursue recovery efforts across jurisdictions.

Circle, which issues the U.S. dollar–pegged USDC stablecoin, typically enforces freezes by blacklisting addresses directly through the token’s smart contract, a feature that blocks any transfers involving those wallets.

The company first froze the three hacker-linked addresses in October 2023 at the direction of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which obtained a seizure warrant shortly after the exploit.

The DOJ later lifted the warrant after failing to identify the hackers, leaving Circle without a legal basis to keep the wallets locked. The latest order restores that authority.

According to the court filing, the freeze is necessary to prevent competing claims over the same funds. A group of U.S. investors had filed a separate class action lawsuit against Circle in New York State court, seeking control of the stolen USDC.

That case has now been paused following the federal court’s ruling. Circle moved the matter to the Southern District of New York under the Class Action Fairness Act, which allows large, multi-jurisdictional class actions to be heard in federal court.

After the $125M Hack, Multichain Faces Its Final Chapter in Court

The Multichain collapse, one of the most high-profile failures in the decentralized finance sector, stemmed from an exploit discovered in July 2023.

Unidentified attackers drained over $125 million from Multichain’s bridge contracts on Fantom, Moonriver, and Dogechain, transferring funds to unknown addresses.

Multichain Bridge Exploit: Trader’s $280K Becomes $1.9 M Windfall

A wallet address has transformed nearly 1.9 million #Fantom tokens, initially worth $280,000, into $1.9 million after the long-frozen Multichain Bridge momentarily opened.#CryptoNewshttps://t.co/rvcu4Q4FtI

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) November 2, 2023

Multichain, formerly known as Anyswap, operated as one of the largest cross-chain bridge protocols, allowing users to move assets across blockchains like Ethereum, BNB Chain, Avalanche, and Polygon.

The platform had a total value locked of about $9.2 billion in early 2022, according to data from DeFiLlama, before its troubles began in mid-2023.

Reports later surfaced that the company’s CEO, known as Zhaojun, had been detained in China, leaving the project in disarray.

Following the hack, affected projects, including the Fantom Foundation, launched legal actions in Singapore. In March 2024, the High Court of Singapore issued a default judgment in Fantom’s favor, finding that Multichain had breached contractual obligations.

By May 2025, the same court approved a winding-up order against Multichain Foundation Ltd., appointing KPMG’s Bob Yap Cheng Ghee, Toh Ai Ling, and Tan Yen Chiaw as joint liquidators to oversee asset recovery and dissolution.

The frozen $63 million in USDC represents a portion of the total $210 million stolen from Multichain. The liquidators are seeking to recover these assets as part of the broader winding-up process.

In their U.S. filing, they described the New York court’s provisional relief as “an effective mechanism to implement Chapter 15’s policies of promoting cooperation between courts of the United States and foreign courts involved in cross-border restructuring cases.”




Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Claude AI Forecasts Top Crypto Picks for 2026: XRP, SUI, AAVE, and a Meme Coin

November 1, 2025

SOL Price Prediction: Targeting $240-275 by December 2025 as Technical Indicators Signal Bullish Reversal

November 1, 2025

Fed Crushes Caitlin Long Bank’s Master Account Bid After Appeal

October 31, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

What's New Here!

XRP Could Reach $5, But Ozak AI Prediction Is Catching the Market’s Eye

November 1, 2025

Cardano Price Prediction November 2025: Whale Accumulation Signals a Rebound to $1

November 1, 2025

Crypto Hacks Drop 85% in October as Market Faces Historic $20 Billion Crash

November 1, 2025

Claude AI Forecasts Top Crypto Picks for 2026: XRP, SUI, AAVE, and a Meme Coin

November 1, 2025
AsiaTokenFund
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoin
  • Web3
    • Blockchain
  • Trading
  • Regulations
    • Scams
  • Submit Article
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA
© 2025 asiatokenfund.com - All Rights Reserved!

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.