Blockchain & Cryptocurrency
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Cryptocurrency Fraud
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Cybercrime
Also: UK Fraud Investigators Make Arrests in $28M Basis Markets Rug-Pull Probe

Every week, Information Security Media Group rounds up cybersecurity incidents involving digital assets. This week, World Liberty Financial scrambles to secure user funds, the U.K.’s Serious Fraud Office arrests two people in a $28 million Basis Markets rug-pull probe, Gana Payment hack drains $3.1 million and Crypto Dispensers weighs $100 million sale after CEO charged with money laundering.
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World Liberty Financial Scrambles to Secure User Funds
World Liberty Financial said it is reallocating user funds and verifying identities through new know-your-customer checks after discovering that some wallets were compromised through phishing attacks or exposed seed phrases. The cryptocurrency project, which has links to U.S. President Donald Trump, blamed “third-party security lapses,” rather than any flaws in its own platform or smart contracts. WLF said it froze affected wallets in September, confirmed ownership and is now testing new smart-contract logic to move user funds into secure, replacement wallets.
The announcement comes as the company faces growing political pressure, with Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jack Reed reportedly urging federal agencies to investigate allegations that WLF tokens were sold to sanctioned entities. The claims stem from a September watchdog’s report detailing sales of $WLFI tokens to entities tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, a sanctioned Russian “ruble-backed sanctions evasion tool, money laundering platform Tornado Cash, as well as an Iranian crypto exchange.
WLF has denied the allegations, with a spokesperson telling CNBC it conducts rigorous KYC and anti-money laundering checks “on every pre-sale purchaser of the $WLFI governance token – the highest standard in the industry – and turned down millions of dollars from potential purchasers who failed the tests.”
Britain’s SFO Arrests Two in Rug-Pull Probe
Britain’s Serious Fraud Office arrested two men on suspicion of fraud and money laundering as part of a probe into the suspected $28 million rug pull at Basis Markets. Officers conducted coordinated raids in south London and Bradford, England, detaining one man in his thirties and another in his forties for questioning.
The SFO, a U.K. government department that investigates and prosecutes cases of serious or complex fraud, bribery and corruption, described the case as being its “first major cryptocurrency investigation into suspected fraud.” As yet, no charges have been filed.
Basis Markets launched in late 2021, promising to offer a decentralized hedge fund delivering delta-neutral arbitrage yields to retail investors. The founders claimed to have more than 80 years’ worth of combined experience and raised about $7 million through a membership non-fungible token sale and another $20.7 million in a public token offering.
Investigators subsequently found that the proceeds went straight to the founders’ personal wallets, despite promises of token locks and treasury management. The project never delivered a product, halted operations in mid-2022 and disappeared, even as the founders flaunted luxury purchases. One founder, identified as U.K.-based trader Adam Cobb-Webb, was sanctioned by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission in August 2023 for unrelated spoofing violations.
Gana Payment Hack Drains $3.1M
A hacker stole crypto worth $3.1 million from the Gana Payment project, then moved the stolen crypto using a BNB Smart Chain – aka BSC – and Ethereum, said the on-chain investigator who goes by ZachXBT, in a post to Telegram. He said the hacker gathered the funds in a BSC wallet ending in e5c38 and converted most of the assets into Binance Coin, or BNB. About 1,140 BNB, worth roughly $1 million, were then routed to Tornado Cash on BSC to obscure the trail.
ZachXBT said the remaining assets were bridged to Ethereum, where the exploiter deposited another 346.8 ETH – worth about $1 million – into Tornado Cash. An additional 346 ETH, valued at $1 million, remains idle at an Ethereum address ending in b3cca.
Gana Payment, a small BEP-20 token project on the BSC, operates mainly through decentralized exchanges and on-chain liquidity pools, has minimal public documentation and no known security audits. The nature of the vulnerability apparently exploited by the hacker has yet to be disclosed.
Crypto Dispensers Weighs $100M Sale After CEO Charged
Crypto Dispensers said it is evaluating a $100 million sale offer, days after federal prosecutors charged founder and CEO Firas Isa, 36, with participating in a $10 million money laundering scheme involving his company’s nationwide network of crypto ATMs (see: Chicago Crypto ATM CEO Charged in Laundering Scheme.
The company said it hired advisers to conduct a strategic review and highlighted its 2020 shift from physical Bitcoin ATMs to a software-focused model meant to reduce fraud risk and meet growing regulatory and compliance demands. The company’s announcement did not include any comments on Isa’s charges, instead portraying the review as a natural, next step in scaling up the business.
Prosecutors allege that from 2018 to 2025, Isa knowingly accepted millions of dollars’ worth of wire fraud and drug trafficking proceeds through the company’s ATM network and converted the funds into crypto to mask their origin. Isa, who faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted, has pleaded not guilty.
