The stablecoin issuer Circle is under intense scrutiny following its response to this week’s $285 million theft from the Drift protocol.
The perpetrators initially drained approximately $71 million in USDC tokens directly from Drift’s platform. Following the conversion of most other stolen digital assets into USDC, the attacker utilized Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) to relocate roughly $232 million worth of USDC from the Solana blockchain to Ethereum.
This cross-chain movement significantly complicated recovery efforts. It also placed Circle squarely in the crosshairs of industry criticism.
On-chain investigator ZachXBT emerged as a prominent voice challenging Circle’s response. He contended that Circle possessed the technical capability to blacklist addresses and immobilize funds but failed to deploy these measures swiftly during the ongoing attack.
Circle issued a firm rebuttal to the accusations. A company representative informed CoinDesk that as a regulated entity, Circle exclusively freezes assets when legally mandated through judicial orders or official law enforcement directives.
Salman Banei, who serves as general counsel for tokenized asset platform Plume, supported Circle’s stance. He emphasized that freezing cryptocurrency without proper legal authorization could subject issuers to significant legal exposure. He advocated for legislators to establish legal protections enabling issuers to respond more rapidly in unambiguous theft scenarios.
Not everyone in the cryptocurrency sector views this incident through a simple lens. Ben Levit, who heads stablecoin evaluation firm Bluechip, characterized the Drift incident as involving market and oracle manipulation rather than a conventional hack, positioning it within a murky legal territory.
ZachXBT escalated his critique by releasing data suggesting that Circle has declined to freeze or blacklist approximately $420 million in suspicious USDC transactions spanning 15 distinct incidents dating back to 2022.
Within this collection of cases, he alleges Circle refused to freeze $9 million from the GMX exchange breach in July 2025, and that addresses associated with the $200 million Cetus DEX theft only received blacklist treatment after the stolen funds had already been exchanged out of USDC.
He emphasized that the $420 million estimate encompasses only prominent public incidents and that actual losses likely exceed this figure substantially.
Circle had previously investigated “reversible” USDC functionality in September 2025, a mechanism potentially enabling the rollback of transactions in theft situations. The company has historically frozen USDC holdings, notably funds connected to Tornado Cash wallets sanctioned by US authorities in 2022.
Cybersecurity experts tracking blockchain threats have attributed the Drift exploit to hacking groups affiliated with North Korea’s government.
The post Why Circle Refused to Freeze $285M in Stolen USDC During the Drift Protocol Hack appeared first on Blockonomi.

