May 15, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Senate’s New Stablecoin Draft Doesn’t Target Trump’s Crypto, Tweaks Big-Tech Approach SEC Is Probing Coinbase Over User Number Misstatement Concern Eric Trump Says He Got Into Crypto Amid Political Attack, Calls Bitcoin ‘Digital Gold’ Litecoin’s ETF Hopes Rise Even as Price Retreats From $101 Peak Ethereum Meant To Be Alternative, Not Rival to Bitcoin: ETH Co-Founder Anthony Di Iorio Kevin O’Leary: ‘I Want More Regulation, And I Want It Now’ Crypto Exchange CEO’s Daughter, Grandson Targeted in Paris Kidnap Attempt Uniswap (UNI) Falls 6% as Institutions Offload $82M, Still Up 20% in a Month U.S. Senate’s Stablecoin Push Still Alive as Bill May Return to Floor: Sources Smokey The Bera to Make Berachain More Resilient to Crypto Volatility

U.S. Law Enforcement Seizes $31M in Crypto Tied to Uranium Finance Hack

U.S. authorities have seized about $31 million in crypto tied to the 2021 hack of Uranium Finance, according to a Monday X post from the Southern District of New York (SDNY).

According to the post, the seizure was the result of a joint effort between SDNY and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in San Diego. A spokesperson for SDNY did not return CoinDesk’s request for comment before press time, and no further details about the seizure or any related investigation were immediately available.

Uranium Finance was essentially a clone of automated market maker (AMM) Uniswap deployed on Binance’s BNB chain (then called Binance Smart Chain). In April 2021, a hacker exploited a bug in Uranium’s pair contracts to steal $50 million in various tokens. At the time of the incident, the Uranium Finance hack was one of the largest monetary exploits in decentralized finance (DeFi) history.

Read more: Binance Chain DeFi Exchange Uranium Finance Loses $50M in Exploit

After the exploit, the hacker attempted to launder a portion of the funds in a variety of ways, including using crypto mixer Tornado Cash, depositing small amounts of crypto into centralized exchanges, and, according to blockchain sleuth ZachXBT, perhaps through purchasing rare and highly valuable Magic: The Gathering trading cards.

Uranium Finance shuttered after the hack, leaving victims without answers or financial restitution. The partial recovery, which comes nearly four years after the initial attack, offers the first glimmer of hope for victims to see some of their money returned.

This post was originally published on this site