Home NewsStory Circle Class Action Lawsuit Ignites After $280M Drift Hack

Circle Class Action Lawsuit Ignites After $280M Drift Hack

by Ouess
A dynamic financial infographic visualizing the complex legal and market situation surrounding Circle after a $280M Drift hack. A prominent geometric bull charges upwards over a complex chart with price targets. Above, large text reads 'CIRCLE CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT IGNITES AFTER $280M DRIFT HACK'. Below, multiple labels with upward-pointing arrows trace price growth milestones.

Circle class action lawsuit headlines exploded on Thursday. A Missouri-based crypto user, Joshua McCollum, filed the proposed class action in Massachusetts District Court. He represents over 100 Drift Protocol investors who lost money in the devastating April 1 hack.

The allegations are serious. Plaintiffs claim Circle knowingly allowed suspected North Korea-linked attackers to move roughly $230 million in stolen USDC. How? Through Circle’s own Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP). The hackers bridged funds from Solana to Ethereum in over 100 transactions across eight hours. All during U.S. business hours.

Circle Class Action Lawsuit: Why Plaintiffs Are Furious

The lawsuit argues Circle had both the technical ability and contractual authority to freeze the stolen funds. Yet it did nothing. As evidence, plaintiffs point to a separate case just nine days earlier. Circle froze 16 unrelated wallets under court direction. So, they clearly knew how to act.

On-chain investigator ZachXBT summed up the frustration: “Six hours is how long Circle had to freeze stolen funds from the $280M+ Drift hack.” He’s been Circle’s loudest critic, claiming its slow approach has let over $420 million in stolen funds escape since 2022.

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire Defends the Policy

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire isn’t backing down. Speaking at a press conference in Seoul, he stated that Circle only freezes USDC wallets at the direction of law enforcement or courts. He called unilateral action a “significant moral quandary.” His words: “If there are others that believe that Circle should just step away from what the law says and do its own, make its own decisions, I think it’s a very risky proposition.”

The crypto community is split. Bloomberg analyst James Seyffart criticized the ambiguity, saying: “Either you’re a decentralized protocol and literally do not have the power to freeze, or you’re not and you should be freezing hacked funds.” Meanwhile, ARK Invest’s director warned that freezing without legal backing opens the door for arbitrary decisions.

Drift Protocol Pivots to Tether

In a sharp rebuke to Circle, Drift Protocol announced a $150 million recovery plan in partnership with Tether. The package includes up to $127.5 million from Tether. More importantly, Drift is shifting from USDC to USDT as its core settlement asset. The message is clear: Circle’s inaction has consequences.

My Thoughts

This lawsuit cuts to the heart of stablecoin regulation. Circle is in an impossible position: freeze without a court order and you’re accused of centralized overreach; wait for legal process and you’re blamed for letting stolen funds escape. The Drift hack exposed this regulatory no-man’s-land. The fact that Circle froze 16 unrelated wallets just days earlier makes their defense weaker. For investors, this is a major overhang on CRCL stock. For the industry, it’s a wake-up call. Expect lawmakers to fast-track stablecoin legislation clarifying freeze authority. Until then, Circle’s “court-order-only” policy is under fire. Watch the CLARITY Act closely.

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