Circle Responds To $270m Drift Exploit With Policy Statement On Usdc Freeze Powers
@circle published a policy blog today responding to the $270 million Drift Protocol exploit that occurred on April 1, defending its $USDC freeze authority as a "compliance obligation" exercised only when "legally compelled by an appropriate authority, through lawful process." The post emphasized the freeze power is "not a backdoor" and "not algorithmic surveillance."
The statement comes as the digital asset ecosystem debates how to respond to the Drift incident, which Drift's own postmortem attributed to UNC4736, a North Korean state-affiliated group also known as AppleJeus or Citrine Sleet.
Circle's blog post coincides with the US Treasury's accelerated rulemaking on the GENIUS Act, including financial integrity norms for stablecoins. The company framed the principle as "the same framework that allows us to act when compelled is the same framework that protects every @USDC holder from arbitrary or politically motivated interference."


