[Coin World] There is evidence but no case filed, so the money can't be recovered? This matter is causing a stir in the Shiba Inu community.
The victims of the bridge vulnerability attack in August are feeling quite frustrated now—on-chain analyst Shima has traced over $3 million in fund flows clearly, even locating 111 associated wallets and 45 deposit addresses at a leading exchange, mapping out the money laundering paths.
But the exchange responded very officially: “We can only cooperate with the freeze if you provide the case number from the law enforcement agency.” The problem is stuck here - currently, the police have not formally filed a case, and the victim does not have this number in hand.
The evidence is there, but the process is at a standstill. The community's attitude has now changed from “waiting for official handling” to “forget it, let's find a way ourselves.” Some people have started to privately consult lawyers about cross-border rights protection, while others are researching whether they can directly report to law enforcement agencies in various countries.
This is quite ironic: on-chain data is transparent, but recovering assets is instead blocked by the compliance processes of traditional finance.
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$3 million stolen funds tracking is at an impasse: evidence is conclusive but cannot be frozen due to lack of case number.
[Coin World] There is evidence but no case filed, so the money can't be recovered? This matter is causing a stir in the Shiba Inu community.
The victims of the bridge vulnerability attack in August are feeling quite frustrated now—on-chain analyst Shima has traced over $3 million in fund flows clearly, even locating 111 associated wallets and 45 deposit addresses at a leading exchange, mapping out the money laundering paths.
But the exchange responded very officially: “We can only cooperate with the freeze if you provide the case number from the law enforcement agency.” The problem is stuck here - currently, the police have not formally filed a case, and the victim does not have this number in hand.
The evidence is there, but the process is at a standstill. The community's attitude has now changed from “waiting for official handling” to “forget it, let's find a way ourselves.” Some people have started to privately consult lawyers about cross-border rights protection, while others are researching whether they can directly report to law enforcement agencies in various countries.
This is quite ironic: on-chain data is transparent, but recovering assets is instead blocked by the compliance processes of traditional finance.