On May 4, Aave filed an emergency motion in federal court to lift the freeze on approximately $73 million in ETH. These funds were recovered after the April 18 Kelp DAO exploit, but a May 1 court order approved their seizure to satisfy decades-old terrorism judgments against North Korea. Aave’s founder stated: “A thief does not own what he steals.” At the heart of the dispute is whether recovered stolen assets belong to the original users or can be claimed by outside creditors based on an alleged national link to the hacker. The DeFi community’s recovery efforts are now clashing with the U.S. judicial process, and the final ruling could reshape asset ownership rules in crypto.












10.05K Phổ biến
14.27K Phổ biến
109.72K Phổ biến
43.21K Phổ biến
3.88K Phổ biến
822.9K Phổ biến
204.87K Phổ biến
708.8K Phổ biến
374.76K Phổ biến
392.64K Phổ biến