Atomic Wallet Hackers Move Stolen Funds via OFAC-Sanctioned Exchange Garantex: Elliptic

The attackers are believed to be the infamous North Korean hacker group Lazarus, as per blockchain security firm Elliptic.

AccessTimeIconJun 13, 2023 at 8:16 a.m. UTC
Updated Jun 13, 2023 at 3:07 p.m. UTC
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Attackers behind earlier this month’s $35 million exploit of crypto wallet Atomic Wallet are moving stolen funds via OFAC-sanctioned exchange Garantex, blockchain security firm Elliptic said Tuesday.

Elliptic investigators believe Atomic Wallet was hacked by the infamous North Korean hacking group Lazarus, as previously reported.

Last year, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the U.S. Treasury sanctioned Garentex, stating the exchange had lax anti-money laundering measures and that it allowed “illicit players” to freely move money using the service. However, Garantex continues to operate.

Elliptic security researchers said in a tweet on Tuesday that several crypto exchanges have already frozen addresses related to the Atomic Wallet hack, but some funds have found their way to Garantex.

These funds were previously exchanged via the on-chain trading tool 1inch, transferred to Garantex, and then traded for bitcoin (BTC). The bitcoin was then laundered through Sinbad, a bitcoin mixer service allegedly used by North Korean hacking groups.

Nearly $35 million worth of various tokens were stolen from Atomic Wallet, a centralized storage and wallet service, on June 3. These tokens include bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH), tether (USDT), dogecoin (DOGE), litecoin (LTC), BNB coin (BNB) and Polygon's MATIC.

Atomic Wallet said at the time that the impacted users represented “less than 1% of its monthly active users.” Investigations were ongoing as of June 8.

Edited by Parikshit Mishra.

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Shaurya Malwa

Shaurya is the Deputy Managing Editor for the Data & Tokens team, focusing on decentralized finance, markets, on-chain data, and governance across all major and minor blockchains.


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