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US Law Firm Seeks Court Order to Redistribute $344M in USDT Tied to Iran



Law firm Gerstein Harrow LLP has filed a fresh motion in a miscellaneous enforcement case, seeking more than $344 million in frozen USDt stablecoins that the firm says are linked to Iranian entities. The filing argues that the plaintiffs are owed over $532 million in compensatory damages and more than $1.8 billion in punitive damages tied to acts of terrorism allegedly sponsored by Iran, covering a span of more than 25 years. The move forms part of a broader lawsuit aimed at recouping digital assets as compensation for victims of state-sponsored violence by North Korea and Iran, a strategy that has sparked considerable debate within the crypto community.


In May, Gerstein Harrow filed a restraining notice against the Kelp decentralized autonomous organization, attempting to block the transfer of frozen Ether tied to the $293 million Kelp exploit in April. Critics have argued that such tactics can delay payments to victims of hacks, potentially deprioritizing those whose losses are directly tied to a breach, while extending the reach of asserts in unrelated judgments spanning decades.


The motion to claim $344 million in frozen stablecoins linked to Iranian entities. Source: PACER


The broader suit targets not only Iranian assets but also DPRK-linked holdings, with the aim of redistributing funds to victims of various judgments tied to state-sponsored violence. Crypto observers have questioned the legitimacy and timing of applying long-dormant judgments to current crypto assets, arguing that the approach may complicate or slow down relief for those harmed by more recent hacks.


In the same week, the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) ordered Tether to freeze $344 million in USDt stablecoins tied to Iranian entities. The asset freeze drew mixed reactions within the industry, with some criticizing centralized issuers for enforcing sanctions through wallet-level freezes and others arguing that enforcement is a necessary, if complex, tool for sanction compliance.


Several insiders and commentators have joined the debate over the ethics and practicality of such asset-seizure strategies. ZachXBT, a well-known on-chain researcher and commentator, criticized Gerstein Harrow’s approach, labeling the firm “predatory” and “evil” in a May post. He argued that the law firm relies on security research about crypto hacks to justify claims against victims of state-sponsored wrongdoing, noting that attempts to seize assets tied to decades-old incidents can overshadow the restitution needs of actual hack victims today.

“This is a predatory US law firm with a strategy that is pure evil. Whenever there’s a new Lazarus Group victim after an exploit and crypto assets get frozen, these clowns come in and say they have a claim for an alleged DPRK victim from 26 years ago that has zero relation to crypto or exploits/hacks.”

— ZachXBT


The conversation around these motions has highlighted long-running tensions between punitive asset recovery efforts and practical restitution for those directly harmed by hacks. Earlier reporting noted that OFAC’s April action to freeze Iranian-linked USDt intensified debate about the role of centralized issuers in enforcing sanctions and the potential impact on asset holders who are not party to any wrongdoing. The case also echoes a pattern in which law firms pursue broad, cross-jurisdictional claims against crypto platforms and assets in the wake of hacks, prompting scrutiny from community members who worry about diluting compensation for actual victims.


The March-to-April period also saw other related actions, including a restraining order related to the Kelp DAO’s liquid staking activities, which underscores a broader legal tactic: securing crypto assets swiftly in the wake of a breach or sanction trigger, then pursuing multi-jurisdictional claims over those assets. Comparisons are being drawn to earlier high-profile cases involving hacks at platforms like Harmony and Bybit, where victims and observers weighed the ethics of using frozen or seized assets to satisfy broader, older judgments.


For investors and builders, the unfolding dispute raises questions about how asset recovery strategies might affect the flow of funds in post-hack scenarios and the ability of legitimate victims to access compensation in a timely manner. It also underscores the evolving legal risk profile for custody providers, exchanges, and other crypto-native entities that could be drawn into these multi-jurisdictional disputes as sanctions and enforcement actions intersect with civil claims.


The implications extend beyond the courtroom. As regulators and courts grapple with the balance between punitive measures and fair restitution, market participants will be watching how authorities and plaintiffs reconcile long-standing judgments with contemporary crypto asset dynamics. The next steps in this case—alongside ongoing enforcement actions and potential new filings—will likely influence how future asset-recovery efforts are structured and contested.


Readers should monitor upcoming court filings and regulatory moves for signs of how these strategies evolve. The core question remains whether broad asset-recovery measures can deliver timely relief to hack victims without compromising due process or creating unintended collateral effects for the broader crypto ecosystem.



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