- Circle froze $57M in USDC linked to LIBRA after a U.S. court order prompted by Burwick Law.
- The action stems from a fraud lawsuit alleging LIBRA misused investor funds.
- It underscores how centralized stablecoins can be legally controlled—challenging the idea of crypto autonomy.
Stablecoin issuer Circle has frozen more than $57 million in USDC after receiving a U.S. court order related to a legal case involving the LIBRA project. The order, prompted by a filing from Burwick Law, targets wallet addresses connected to the LIBRA team.
Legal Background
The case centers around allegations that the LIBRA team defrauded investors, misappropriating funds that were originally raised for token development. Plaintiffs argue that a significant portion of the raised capital was diverted for unauthorized uses. While full case details remain partially sealed, the court found sufficient grounds to issue a freeze on specified USDC addresses.
Centralization Concerns
Circle’s compliance with the court’s directive reinforces a larger concern within crypto: how much power centralized entities still hold in an industry built on decentralization. Though wallet freezes are standard in traditional finance, they’re less common in crypto—and their growing frequency could signal a shift. With Circle and other stablecoin issuers under U.S. jurisdiction, enforcement through centralized rails is increasingly becoming a norm.
This incident raises broader questions about user autonomy and the risk of legal overreach in digital finance. As more legal tools are applied to crypto infrastructure, the tension between freedom and enforcement becomes harder to ignore.