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American law firms launch class-action investigation into Drift Protocol hacking incident, pointing fingers at Circle
Deep Tide TechFlow News, April 9 — The U.S. law firm Gibbs Mura has launched a class action investigation into the hacking incident of Drift Protocol on April 1, 2026, examining potential claims by investors against Circle Internet Financial.
The attack resulted in approximately $280 million to $285 million in assets being stolen. The attacker subsequently transferred over $230 million USDC across chains via Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) to Ethereum, with Circle taking no freezing measures throughout the process. Just nine days before the incident, Circle had proactively frozen 16 business wallets in a civil dispute. Blockchain analytics firm Elliptic suspects the attack is linked to North Korea-backed hacking groups.
The attack caused Drift Protocol’s total locked value (TVL) to plummet from $550 million to below $250 million, with the DRIFT token price dropping over 40%, and at least 20 DeFi protocols suffering indirect losses.