Coinone employees "admit to facts" in case regarding token listing bribes

A lawyer for a broker and the former director of the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange Coinone have told a court that their clients "admit the facts of the prosecution". The director, "Mr. Jeon", is accused of accepting more than ₩2 billion (~$1.5 million) in bribes in exchange for listing shady tokens on the exchange. In one case, the exchange was the only platform to list a token called "Furiever Coin", which has been linked to a kidnapping and murder investigation in Seoul.

Four executives were arrested in connection to the investigation in April, under suspicion that they had received ₩2.4 billion (~$2.2 million) in bribes in exchange for listing dozens of coins.

Coinone is one of the most popular South Korean cryptocurrency exchanges. In July 2022, it was among the seven exchanges raided by Korean authorities in the wake of the Terra/Luna collapse, as the country began applying harsher scrutiny to crypto platforms.

Crypto payments firm Unbanked to shut down

The US-based crypto payments and custody platform Unbanked announced in a blog post that they will be shutting down services. The company was founded in 2018, and claimed they wanted to provide regulated, on-shore services to US-based companies hoping to engage with crypto. As is common with blockchain company shutdowns these days, they blamed US regulators. Referring to their choice to build the company in the US, they wrote: "We unfortunately learned... taking this path lead [sic] to a lot of wasted time and excessive costs. To state it bluntly, US regulators are actively trying to stop companies (banks and fintechs) from supporting crypto assets – even when the companies are trying to do it correctly and by the book. Their efforts are working and ultimately limited Unbanked’s ability to raise capital and run a self-sustaining business."

However, Unbanked also let on that their closure was more related to an investment falling through than to any regulatory issues. The company wrote that a $5 million investment was never delivered, and that the company had "exhausted all options" funding-wise.

DCG shutters TradeBlock subsidiary

Digital Currency Group, the parent company of several companies in the crypto industry including Genesis, Grayscale Investments, and CoinDesk, announced that it will be shuttering TradeBlock, its trade execution and prime brokerage services unit. The company cited the typical reasons: "crypto winter" and "the challenging regulatory environment for digital assets in the U.S."

The decision comes amidst broader troubles for DCG, which is embroiled in the bankruptcy proceedings of its Genesis subsidiary. Earlier in May, DCG missed a $630 million payment to Genesis.

Hackers steal around $170,000 after compromising Steve Aoki's Twitter account

Headshot of Steve AokiSteve Aoki (attribution)
Twitter account compromises remain a lucrative way to scam crypto enthusiasts. Someone was able to compromise the Twitter account belonging to electronic musician and crypto enthusiast Steve Aoki, posting a fake link to his NFT project that drained unsuspecting traders' wallets.

The scam was helped along by ben.eth, a Twitter personality who retweeted one of the tweets by the compromised account in which Aoki appeared to endorse a token created by ben.eth. According to crypto sleuth zachxbt, multiple followers of ben.eth were impacted by his retweet, which zachxbt characterized as "quote tweet[ing] a phishing scam posted by the compromised @steveaoki account for clout". Ben.eth ultimately promised to reimburse his fans who lost money thanks to his tweets.

Transactions stuck on Multichain blockchain bridge due to "force majeure"

The Multichain blockchain bridge, formerly known as Anyswap, encountered an apparent issue as users' funds were delayed for over 24 hours in getting to their destination. Some reported delays since as far back as May 21. The delay was blamed on a backend upgrade "taking longer than expected". Multichain later tweeted that "some of the cross-chain routes are unavailable due to force majeure, and the time for service to resume is unknown". They also announced that they would compensate affected users.

Meanwhile, rumors swirled that the Multichain team had been arrested by Chinese police, though there doesn't seem to be much corroborating evidence of this.

The issues and the rumors sparked a drop in token price of around 30%. Several large parties also appeared to distance themselves from the project and its token, including the Fantom Foundation, which withdrew 449,740 MULTI (~$2.4 million) in liquidity on SushiSwap.

On May 31, Multichain issued a statement that "we are currently unable to contact CEO Zhaojun and obtain the necessary server access for maintenance", and wrote that even more bridges were being impacted by the same issues as in the previous week.

Morgan DF Fintoch likely exit scams for around $31 million

A Ponzi scheme called Morgan DF Fintoch lured consumers by claiming to be owned by the American banking giant Morgan Stanley. Morgan Stanley themselves warned of the scheme, writing that it was an impersonator, and that any claims of affiliation were false. The government of Singapore also issued a warning about the firm in early May. The company advertised a wallet which they claimed would "pay 1% per day,36% 30 Days and 100% in 63 days".

On May 23, crypto sleuth zachxbt tweeted that the project appeared to have executed their exit scam, bridging around 31.6 million Tether to various addresses. Platform users began to report that they could not withdraw funds.

Brand new $CS token exploited for almost $700,000

An attacker exploited the brand new $CS token for almost $700,000 using a flash loan exploit. They then swapped the funds into around 383 ETH ($689,400) and laundered them through Tornado Cash.

Tornado Cash DAO suffers hostile takeover

A proposal ostensibly to penalize cheating network participants in the Tornado Cash crypto tumbler project successfully passed by DAO vote. However, the proposer had added an extra function, which they subsequently used to obtain 1.2 million votes. Now that they have more than the ~700,000 legitimate Tornado Cash votes, they have full control of the project.

The attacker has already drained locked votes and sold some of the $TORN tokens, which are governance tokens that both entitle the holder to a vote but also were being traded for $5–$7 around the time of the attack. The attacker has since tumbled 360 ETH (~$655,300) through Tornado Cash to obscure its final destination. Meanwhile, $TORN plummeted in value more than 30% as the attacker dumped the tokens.

The attacker now has full control over the DAO, which according to crypto security researcher Sam Sun grants them the ability to withdraw all of the locked votes (as they did), drain all of the tokens in the governance contract, and "brick" (make permanently non-functional) the router.

Croatian cryptocurrency investment company BitLucky reportedly collapses; more than $75 million allegedly missing

Croatian company BitLucky told its customers that it would invest their money in cryptocurrencies, promising 5–25% monthly profits. However, its director Luka Burazer wrote an email to clients on May 19, explaining: "Dear clients, with a series of bad trades and decisions, unfortunately, I have brought the state of the company into a crisis situation. We will have more information in the following days". He and the company co-founder have since gone dark, turning off their cell phones, not replying to emails, and deleting their social media presence. According to Croatian news outlet Jutarnji list, a secretary for the company reached on the phone explained, "the director went crazy and spent all the money". The losses allegedly involve crypto assets notionally worth €70 million (~$75.7 million), and affect at least 700 individuals.

Some have expressed the opinion that BitLucky was a Ponzi scheme all along, given the unreasonable promises of 5–25% monthly returns. The editor of a crypto news outlet also expressed that "there was a 'line of [red] flags'", including that Burazer never wanted to appear in the media or have his picture shown online.

WDZD Swap exploited for $1.1 million

On May 19, an attacker successfully exploited the BNB Chain-based defi project WDZD Swap, making off with 609 Binance-Pegged ETH (~$1.1 million). The attack was apparently executed by a known exploiter, who had also previously exploited a project called Swap X.

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