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Ethereum's Most Notorious Front Running Bot's Own Greed Gets Used Against It - Tricked Into Giving Up MILLIONS worth of ETH...

The hunter became the hunted, and the hunter was holding a fortune in stolen ETH when it happened.

JaredFromSubway.eth, the most active and most hated MEV or 'front running' bot on Ethereum - it works by spotting places where it can insert itself ahead of a pending trade, cuts in line ahead by paying higher gas fees, buying the tokens that otherwise should have gone to you, instead forcing your order to be filled with higher priced tokens. Then, once you've overpaid for your coins, it will immediately sell the ones they bought at the new higher price. While the amount earned each time is often small, multiply that by hundreds of transactions every hour and this practice adds millions in additional costs to traders every year. 

But it was the front runners who took a hit over the weekend by an attacker built an elaborate honeypot designed to look exactly like the kind of profit opportunity the bot is wired to chase. Security firm Blockaid disclosed the exploit on Saturday, and the on-chain trail tells a story that has the entire crypto community grinning ear to ear. The bot did what it was built to do. The attacker just made sure it did it on the wrong contracts. For anyone who has ever lost a few cents to a sandwich attack while trying to swap on Uniswap, this might be the most satisfying news of the year.

There is no comment from the operator beyond the bounty offer, and there is unlikely to be one any time soon.

How a Hunter Built a Better Trap

The attacker deployed 66 fake token contracts, each one mimicking the look and interface of real assets like WETH, USDC, and USDT, and paired each one with a sham liquidity pool. The routes were carefully designed so that the bot's automated decision logic would flag the contracts as a legitimate sandwich opportunity. The first few baits worked exactly the way a normal MEV trade would. Small approvals went in, the swap closed cleanly, and the approvals were consumed by the trade. The bot's risk model had no reason to flinch.

Then the trap snapped. On the larger bait transactions, the attacker had structured the swaps so that the approvals stayed open instead of being spent on a real trade. By the time anyone was watching, JaredFromSubway had quietly granted token-spending permissions on USDC, USDT, and WETH to a series of attacker-controlled helper contracts. The bot was not hacked in the traditional sense. There was no smart contract bug, no compromised private key, no leaked seed phrase. The exploit was a behavioral one, and the bot was tricked into giving permission the same way it gives permission every day, just to the wrong wallet.

Somewhere Between $7 and $15 Million in ETH, gone

Once the approvals were in place, the attacker drained the bot's working capital and swapped most of it into roughly 4,427 ETH, worth about $7.7 million at the time of the move. On-chain analysts at HTX and other tracking firms watched as 1,000 ETH of those funds were immediately routed into Tornado Cash, the mixer that was sanctioned by the US Treasury before being delisted from the sanctions list earlier this year. The rest of the funds are still being tracked across wallets, with several exchanges already flagging deposit addresses linked to the attacker. Some reports place the final loss higher, with BleepingComputer putting the figure closer to $15 million once every approval is added up.

JaredFromSubway's operator, who has never publicly identified themselves, did not stay quiet. Within hours of the drain, they used an on-chain input data message to offer the attacker a bounty of 2,150 ETH, close to half of the stolen funds, for the return of the rest within 48 hours. The operator said no further action would be taken if the funds came back. The clock started ticking and as of this writing nothing had been returned. Whatever the final number, this is the largest single loss for a private MEV operation in Ethereum's history, and the bounty offer is the first time the JaredFromSubway team has spoken publicly through anything other than block transactions.

The Cosmic Joke Nobody Misses

There is no easy way to feel sorry for the operator of a bot that has spent years skimming value out of every retail user dumb enough to swap with default slippage. The accused attacker has effectively run a counter-MEV operation, a tactic that has been theorized in academic papers for years but rarely executed at this scale. By engineering opportunities that looked profitable but were actually designed to bait approvals, the attacker turned the bot's strongest features, speed and aggression, into its biggest vulnerability. It is the closest thing crypto has had to poetic justice this year, and one of the cleanest examples of the predator becoming the prey since the genre was invented.

The bigger lesson, for any sandwich operator or other automated arbitrage system on Ethereum, is that the meta is shifting. Counter-MEV is no longer just research, and the approvals logic that every bot uses to interact with new contracts has become part of the attack surface. Operators who spent years optimizing for raw speed and gas now also have to optimize for trust. JaredFromSubway has been quiet on chain since the drain, the bounty clock is still running, and the community is still laughing. Somewhere out there a very patient honeypot designer is watching $7.7 million in fresh wallets settle in. Whether the bounty gets accepted or not, the message has already been delivered to every other MEV bot operator on the network. Greed has a price, and it is finally being paid in the same currency it was used to extract.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Bank of England Just Killed It's Own Stablecoin Restrictions, Admits They Were 'Excessively Conservative'...

A central bank does not usually publicly trash its own homework, but the Bank of England did exactly that on Monday.

The Bank spent the better part of a year telling everyone that if you wanted to hold a sterling stablecoin, you would be capped at 20,000 pounds per individual. Businesses got their own 10 million pound ceiling. The reasoning was that if too many deposits flowed out of high street banks and into digital tokens, the lending plumbing that keeps mortgages and overdrafts cheap could spring a leak. That was the official line in the November 2025 consultation, and the industry hated every word of it. Coinbase, Circle, and every UK-based fintech with a stablecoin ambition spent the last six months explaining, loudly, that those caps would push the entire business overseas before it even launched.

On Monday morning, the Bank scrapped the whole concept of personal holding caps. Everyday users and large businesses will no longer face restrictions on how much, how often, or what type of sterling stablecoin they can move. Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden, who has spent the last few months telegraphing this change in interviews and committee appearances, was unusually blunt about why: the original plan was "excessively conservative" and "cumbersome operationally for a temporary measure." When the regulator writing your rulebook publicly calls its own draft cumbersome, the rewrite is just a matter of time. The interesting question is what was supposed to replace the caps, and the answer is more clever than expected.

What replaces the 20,000 pound personal cap

Instead of policing how much retail wallets can hold, the Bank is putting a ceiling on the issuers themselves. Each systemic sterling stablecoin will be allowed up to 40 billion pounds in total circulation, a temporary guardrail the Bank says it will phase out as the market matures. That figure works out to roughly 50 billion dollars at current rates, and it applies per coin rather than across the whole market. So if three different issuers wanted to compete, each could grow to that ceiling without crowding the others out. The Bank also softened the reserve rules, letting issuers park up to 70 percent of backing assets in short-term UK government debt rather than the original 60 percent, with the rest sitting at the central bank. Interest payments to coin holders remain banned, which keeps these tokens from looking too much like savings accounts in disguise.

Why the Bank backed down

Six months of relentless industry pushback and a sharp House of Lords committee report did most of the work. Coinbase's head of policy for Europe, Katie Harries, told reporters that "a cap on stablecoin holdings is a cap on innovation, with real and significant risks for UK competitiveness." Issuers warned they would not bother with the UK market if every retail user had to be screened against an arbitrary holding ceiling, especially when the EU, Singapore, and Hong Kong are all moving toward friendlier frameworks. The threat of London quietly ceding the next decade of fintech building to other capitals seems to have landed at Threadneedle Street. Harries did add that aggregate issuance caps are still unusual globally, and that no other major jurisdiction has made them a baseline requirement, so the new framework is not exactly a victory lap for the industry either.

What this means for users and the next 12 months

The consultation on the new framework is open until 22 September 2026, with the final Code of Practice expected by year end and operational UK-regulated stablecoins targeted for 2027. For UK readers, the practical takeaway is straightforward: if a sterling stablecoin from a regulated issuer launches next year, you will not be told you have hit a personal limit at 20,000 pounds. For the broader industry, this is one of those rare cases where a major central bank publicly walks a position back because the market and lawmakers refused to play along. The Bank still gets its safety mechanism through the issuer-level cap, just without the heavy-handed retail version that nobody wanted to police. Whether 40 billion pounds per coin proves generous or stifling depends on how quickly demand actually shows up, but for now the regulator has chosen to let the market exist rather than fence it off.

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Author: Sebastian Marrow
European Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

How a $4.67 Million Crypto Hack took a FULL WEEK For Anyone to Notice...

It took seven full days for anyone to realize $4.67 million had walked out of the Axelar to Secret Network bridge.

The drain happened on June 10, and nobody on either side noticed until June 17, when a routine cross-chain transfer failed and someone went to check the escrow balance on the Axelar side. The account was empty. Because Secret Network is built around a privacy-by-default design where contract state and transaction details are shielded from public view, the on-chain footprints that usually tip off security researchers within minutes were simply invisible.

That gave the attacker an entire week of breathing room while the funds were quietly moved off. Axelar's emergency committee has since disabled the Secret and Secret-SNIP connections, but the money is already gone.

An infinite-mint bug, wrapped in a custom contract

The vulnerability lived in a modified CW20-ICS20 contract on the Secret side of the bridge, which is the piece of code that handles inbound assets arriving over Cosmos IBC and mints Secret-wrapped versions of them. Those wrapped versions are the saTokens that DeFi users on Secret actually hold and trade. The attacker is accused of doing something elegantly simple: spinning up their own single-validator Cosmos chain, opening a brand new IBC channel directly to the Secret bridge contract, then self-relaying forged packets that carried token denominations matching the contract's allow-list. The contract checked which denomination was coming in. It did not check which channel that denomination was supposed to be coming from.

That single missing check is the entire story. Because the saToken contract trusted any properly-formatted IBC packet carrying a known denomination, the attacker was free to mint fully-backed-looking saUSDT, saUSDC, saDAI, saWETH, saWBTC, saWBNB and sawstETH out of thin air. Those freshly minted saTokens were then redeemed back over the legitimate Axelar IBC channel, which dutifully released the real escrowed assets sitting on the Axelar side. The Secret chain saw nothing unusual because the minting was technically valid. The Axelar chain saw nothing unusual because the redemptions were technically valid. Only the math on the escrow account disagreed, and nobody was looking at it.

A custom rework that never got externally audited

Investigators on the Secret side say the bridge contract had been adapted from a standard escrow model to a mint model when the Axelar integration was put together, and during that rework two validation functions that would have caught exactly this kind of forged-channel attack were removed from the code. Axelar reportedly never requested an external audit before flipping the connection live. Custom bridge code with its safety checks taken out, deployed without a fresh audit on a chain where outside parties cannot easily watch contract state from the outside. That is roughly the worst combination of factors a security researcher could draw up. The exploit itself was almost mundane once you understand how the contract was wired. The fact that nobody caught it for a week is the part that should worry every team running a CW20-ICS20 fork.

AXL up 5%, Secret holders less amused

Axelar's emergency committee has confirmed that the rest of the Axelar network is functioning normally and that the attack was isolated to the Secret connection. Exchanges and law enforcement have reportedly been notified, and the investigation is still open as of this week. Somewhat strangely, AXL has actually traded up around 5% since the news broke, possibly because the market read the quick shutdown as evidence the emergency procedures work the way they were advertised. Secret Network's SCRT, on the other hand, is having a less celebratory week. Holders who used the bridge are now waiting to see whether the Secret community decides to socialize the loss across treasury or staker funds, and whether the Axelar side chips in any of the recovery.

Bridges keep failing the same way

If you have followed crypto security for any length of time you have seen this exact movie before, a custom fork of a standard contract with a couple of safety checks quietly removed, no external audit, and a clever attacker who reads contract code faster than the deployers ever did. What is genuinely new here is the role privacy played in the timeline. The same on-chain opacity that makes Secret Network appealing to users who want shielded balances also blinded the wider security community to the fact that a drain was already in progress for a full week. There is a real conversation to be had about how privacy chains build out-of-band monitoring so the next incident gets caught in hours rather than days. For now, bridge users are out roughly four and a half million dollars, and another integration is being unwound on the fly.

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Author: Dorian Fenwick
Silicon Valley Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Ethereum Foundation Just Lost Its 10th Senior Leader in 6 Months - Why It's Been a Rough Year...

Hsiao-Wei Wang just stepped down as co-executive director of the Ethereum Foundation, and that makes her the second co-director out in four months.

Wang's exit on June 18 also lands her on a different and less flattering list, as roughly the tenth senior figure to walk away from the organization in under half a year. She did it the polite way, with a thoughtful post on X, gratitude for nearly a decade inside the Foundation, and plans to "spend more time closer to home." The timing matters a lot more than the tone. The Foundation she just left is staring down a $30 million annual funding gap for the people who actually maintain Ethereum's base layer, and the warning bell on that came from one of its own former contributors only days earlier.

Wang is the headline here because of who she is, not just the title she held. She joined EF Research in mid-2017 as a Layer 1 researcher, helped build the early proof-of-concepts for sharding, and worked on the Beacon Chain that carried Ethereum through the Merge. In March 2025 she was promoted to co-executive director alongside Tomasz Stanczak, in what was billed as a stable two-person leadership setup for the post-Vitalik era. Stanczak resigned earlier this year. Now Wang is gone too, which leaves the Foundation without a permanent co-executive director for the second time in 2026, while the wider research team is also visibly thinning out around her.

Eight senior names, five months, and an exit list that hurts

The departures around Wang are not junior researchers nobody outside Ethereum has heard of. Carl Beek, Julian Ma, Barnabe Monnot, Tim Beiko, Alex Stokes, and longtime ecosystem coordinator Trent Van Epps have all left or announced exits in 2026. Five of those happened in May alone. Counting Stanczak and Wang, that is roughly ten senior names off the org chart in under six months, with about 19 layoffs and exits across the Foundation in total this year. Whatever is going on internally at EF, it is not a quiet trickle anymore. The people leaving are mostly the ones who knew where the wires connect, and that knowledge is now walking out the door.

The departures sit on top of a separate and equally awkward problem. Van Epps used his own exit window to publicly flag that the people maintaining Ethereum's base layer could face a real funding shortfall in the next three to nine months. He puts the cost of keeping core development running at roughly $30 million a year. The Foundation has been cutting spending across the board, and the Client Incentive Program that helped pay execution clients wound down in April. The math from there is not friendly, and Van Epps is not exactly a stranger to how this sausage gets made.

The "stake to fund" plan isn't covering it

Earlier this year the Foundation pivoted to a "stake to fund" model, putting around 70,000 ETH (roughly $143 million at the time) into staking to generate yield instead of selling treasury straight into the market. The headline math is straightforward and not great, since staking returns work out to something like $4 to $5 million a year against a $30 million annual need. To cover the difference, the Foundation has been quietly drawing down ETH anyway. About 17,000 ETH was unstaked in April, another 21,270 ETH (around $50 million) was unstaked in May, and at least 15,000 ETH has gone out in OTC sales to BitMine, including a 10,000 ETH deal closed on May 1 for about $22.9 million. The "we will not sell ETH" optics are getting harder to defend with that kind of paper trail.

The strange part is that all of this is happening while the network itself looks fine. On-chain activity is healthy, the post-Merge stack is stable, the validator set is enormous, and Ethereum is still the settlement layer most serious L2s build on. The risk is not the protocol layer, it is the coordination layer around it. If client teams and core researchers cannot be reliably funded, upgrade roadmaps slow down, security work gets thinner, and the people who do that work start fielding offers from L2 foundations and large stakers who can pay. That is not a tomorrow problem, that is a next year, possibly sooner problem, which is exactly the window Van Epps was pointing at on his way out.

What ETH holders should actually take from this

None of this means Ethereum is in trouble in the way crypto Twitter would like to dramatize it on a slow Saturday. ETH the asset and ETH the network are not the same thing as the Foundation that helped midwife them, and there are well-funded ecosystem players, including client teams, L2 foundations, and very large stakers, who have every reason to keep the lights on even if EF cannot write the check. But it does mean the institutional center of gravity that used to live inside one organization in Zug is fragmenting in real time. Some of that may be healthy decentralization, since one Swiss nonprofit probably should not be the load-bearing wall for the second largest crypto network. Some of it is normal turnover during a stressful market. And some of it is a $30 million funding hole that someone is going to have to write a check to close before client teams start making different decisions. The next few months will tell us which one of those it actually is, and Wang's exit is a useful marker of how late it is in the day.

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Author: Sebastian Marrow
European Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Jito's New Trading App Sends 80% of Revenue to Token Holders - the Promise Most DeFi Projects Won't Make

The biggest gripe with crypto "governance" tokens has always been the same: holders get fancy voting rights and not much else.

Jito Labs just decided to flip that script. The team behind Solana's largest liquid staking protocol announced JTX, a new self-custody trading platform launching in July, and tied it to one of the most aggressive value accrual mechanisms anywhere in DeFi: 80% of all JTX revenue will flow back into open-market buybacks of the JTO token. Traders noticed quickly. JTO climbed roughly 26% over a single week in mid-June, and the rally is less about hype than about math. If JTX scales the way Jito thinks it can, every dollar of trading fees becomes a small purchase order for JTO. The 20% the protocol keeps goes toward continued platform development.

Compared to the standard DeFi setup, where a governance token vaguely "represents the protocol" while the team quietly cashes in fees, this is a rare moment where token holder incentives and protocol revenue actually point in the same direction. The structure is also explicit, public, and tied to a measurable revenue stream, which is more than most large DeFi protocols have ever been willing to commit to in writing.

Why Jito is building a trading app in the first place

JTX is being pitched as a self-custody alternative to centralized exchanges. The idea is to give Solana traders the speed and convenience of a Binance or Coinbase-style interface, TradingView charts, stop-loss orders, preset strategies, fast execution, without handing over private keys. Spot trading is the starting point, with perpetual futures and prediction markets on the roadmap. That puts JTX on a direct collision course with Hyperliquid and dYdX in the perps market, and with Polymarket on prediction markets. It is an ambitious lineup, and crowded territory in every category.

Jito is not exactly an unknown quantity in the Solana ecosystem. The company runs the network's dominant liquid staking product and has spent years tuning MEV infrastructure that touches a meaningful chunk of every Solana block. Bringing a consumer-facing trading platform under the same roof is less a pivot than an extension, a way to monetize the order flow it was already adjacent to. The team is also one of the few Solana-native projects with enough engineering reputation to seriously challenge the slick, CEX-style execution that Hyperliquid pioneered.

The 80% promise, and why it matters now

DeFi has spent years convincing token holders to accept soft value accrual. Governance rights. Discounted fees. Maybe a sliver of treasury growth. The hard kind, where actual cash gets used to buy the token off the open market, has been rare, mostly because regulators historically treated it as a giant red flag for securities classification. Several U.S. cases have alleged that buybacks tied to platform performance look a lot like dividends, which look a lot like investment contracts. The legal exposure was real enough that almost every major protocol quietly avoided the structure for years.

Jito is doing this anyway, and timing matters. The 2026 regulatory landscape in the United States has loosened considerably. With the CLARITY Act moving through Congress and the SEC dialing back the most aggressive enforcement positions of the previous era, projects are testing what they can get away with, or, depending on your view, what they can finally do without being sued for trying. A buyback mechanism this explicit would have been unthinkable to announce two or three years ago. In 2026, it is a marketing bullet point near the top of the press release.

What traders should actually watch

The number that determines whether any of this works is JTX trading volume. Buybacks scale with revenue, and revenue scales with volume. Hyperliquid, the obvious benchmark, has done several billion dollars in daily perps volume during peak weeks. If JTX captures even a fraction of that, the JTO buyback flow becomes real money. If it does not, this ends up as a structurally elegant token that produces very little actual buying pressure. Early price action has been encouraging, but enthusiasm and execution are different things.

The other risk is what Jito is not saying out loud: 80% of revenue going to token buybacks is a strong commitment, but commitments in DeFi can be amended by governance votes later. Token holders should keep one eye on the actual numbers once JTX is live, and another on any future proposal that quietly walks the figure down. The whole point of this design is that the math is supposed to be honest. If the team or the DAO starts treating that math as a negotiation, the premium evaporates fast.

For now, the optics are working. JTO is one of the few major Solana ecosystem tokens with a clear narrative reason to climb that does not depend on Solana itself going parabolic. July is when the product actually ships, and that is also when the spread between promise and execution starts to compress. Until then, expect the price to keep reflecting how confident the market is that Jito can pull this off, and watch the launch metrics closely once volume data starts coming in.

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Author: Dorian Fenwick
Silicon Valley Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Wyoming's 'Official State Stablecoin' Has a Dozen Other States Watching, Considering their own...

Wyoming has built something the rest of America didn't think a state could build, and the rest of America is now arguing about whether that was a great idea or a very bad one.

The Frontier Stable Token, ticker FRNT, has been quietly running since January, when Wyoming became the first US state to issue its own stablecoin. It is fully reserved with US dollars and short-term Treasuries, carries a 2% statutory overcollateralization buffer, lives on seven blockchains, and is managed on the reserves side by Franklin Templeton. By any clean technical measure, it is one of the better designed dollar tokens in circulation right now. The interesting part is what is happening around it, because Wyoming was supposed to be a quiet experiment and is now being treated as a national test case. People in roughly a dozen other state capitals are reportedly watching closely.

Bloomberg and PYMNTS both ran pieces this week framing FRNT as the test case for a much bigger fight, with roughly a dozen other states and a handful of foreign governments said to be eyeing the model. The Wyoming Stable Token Commission, which was created back in 2023, was set up to build something that was not a CBDC, not a private stablecoin like USDT or USDC, and not a bank deposit. That third option, a publicly accountable token backed by Treasuries and audited monthly, is exactly the kind of thing federal regulators have been trying to define for years without much success. The federal government has spent at least two administrations failing to pass a single comprehensive stablecoin bill, and Wyoming, with a population smaller than San Francisco, has actually shipped something that works. That gap is most of the story.

What FRNT actually is under the hood

FRNT trades on Kraken and is deployed via LayerZero across Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Base, Optimism and Polygon, with Fireblocks handling infrastructure and The Network Firm running monthly attestations. The reserve interest funnels into Wyoming's School Foundation Fund, which is a small but politically clever detail because it ties token adoption directly to school budgets. Franklin Templeton's Fiduciary Trust Co. International is custodian, so the actual cash and bills sit with a federally regulated trust company rather than on a state ledger. Governor Mark Gordon has been described by people involved as a cautious adopter, more focused on getting the plumbing right than chasing volume. Early uptake has been small but steady, with reports of roughly $1.5 million bought in the first week.

Compared to USDT, FRNT looks almost over-engineered, which is the point. Tether has been criticized for years over reserve composition, and the closest US analogue, USDC, was caught up in the Silicon Valley Bank crisis when a portion of its cash reserves got temporarily stuck. FRNT's structure was designed to avoid both of those failure modes, with custody, audits, and overcollateralization all built into Wyoming statute rather than left to issuer discretion. The Avalanche Foundation has publicly called FRNT the first state-issued stablecoin you can actually use, which is the kind of endorsement that lands differently when the rules are written into law rather than into a marketing post. That distinction is going to matter the next time a stablecoin issuer wobbles.

The case being made by critics

Not everyone is impressed. Some legal commentators and historians have pointed out that the United States actually tried decentralized, state-level money before, and it did not go well. The pre-Civil War era featured state-chartered banks issuing their own banknotes, with wildly inconsistent quality and frequent collapses, before the National Bank Act of 1863 pulled the system back under federal control. The argument from this camp is that a patchwork of state-issued stablecoins could reopen that same can of worms, just with smart contracts replacing engraved paper. There are also concerns about privacy, since a state-issued token gives a government entity unusually deep visibility into how its residents use their own money. And there are concerns about centralization, since LayerZero, Fireblocks, Franklin Templeton, and the Wyoming Commission together hold every important lever in the system.

The case being made by supporters

Supporters of state stablecoins frame it almost the opposite way. The view here is that letting private companies be the sole issuers of dollar tokens is itself a centralization problem, and one that has already produced collateral disputes, banking blowups, and offshore opacity. A state-issued token, accountable to elected officials and audited monthly, looks tame in comparison. Kraken's Wyoming-friendly history makes distribution easy, and the early endorsements from infrastructure providers suggest the ecosystem is willing to integrate state tokens the same way it integrates private ones. If a dozen states do follow with their own tokens, the result would be a regulated, dollar-pegged ecosystem that has very little to do with the wildcat banking comparison and a lot to do with municipal bonds, which Americans have lived with for generations.

What we're watching for next

For day to day crypto users, the short term impact of FRNT is small, because $1.5 million is not enough to move any chart. The medium term impact could be considerable. If FRNT proves that a state-issued stablecoin can operate cleanly through a couple of stress tests, the pressure on Congress to write a national stablecoin framework gets sharper, and the runway for new state competitors gets longer. If FRNT stumbles, whether through a reserve issue or a political fight with federal banking regulators, it will be cited as proof that this whole experiment was a mistake. The trade right now is not in FRNT itself. It is in watching whether the model spreads, because the ground rules for the next era of US stablecoins are being written by lawyers in Cheyenne, and a lot of bigger states are reading along.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

FBI Warning: Crypto Scammers Now Send Couriers to Your Front Door - and They Know the Password


 The FBI just put out a warning that should make every crypto investor pick up the phone and call their parents.


The Bureau is seeing a sharp rise in a new twist on the pig butchering playbook, the long-running romance and investment fraud that has already drained billions from American wallets. In this version, scammers do not stop at convincing the victim to wire money or buy crypto online. They walk it right to the front door, in cash, often after persuading the victim that their bank account has been compromised and that handing physical currency to a stranger is somehow the safer move. The Bureau says the couriers are showing up with a "password," a "code," or in some cases the serial number from a specific dollar bill, which the victim was instructed to memorize. Once the cash leaves the house, it is gone.

The mechanics are uglier than the usual phishing email. Scammers typically build trust over weeks or months through dating apps, social media, or even a "wrong number" text that turns into a friendship. Eventually the conversation drifts to investing, and a fake crypto platform is introduced. When the victim's bank flags the wire transfers or their broker refuses to liquidate without a phone call, the scammers shift tactics and tell them to withdraw cash directly, sometimes converting to gold or silver bars first. A courier is then dispatched to the address. Some of these handoffs have happened in driveways, others in parking lots, and the result is always the same.

Why this matters for crypto traders, even if you would never fall for it

Most readers of this site are not the target audience. The people in their contact lists, on the other hand, very well might be. The FBI's most recent figures show Americans lost over $11 billion to cryptocurrency scams in 2025, with people aged 60 and over accounting for roughly $4.35 billion of that total. FBI Boston alone tracked 103 courier pickups across New England between 2023 and 2025, with combined losses above $26 million. The Internet Crime Complaint Center logged another $55 million in courier-related losses in just the back half of 2023, according to the IC3 public service announcement that first flagged the trend. Those numbers have only climbed since.

The Operation Level Up angle most people miss

The Bureau is not only warning, it is also fishing victims out of these rings before they get drained any further. Operation Level Up, the FBI's outreach program for pig butchering targets, has notified about 9,000 victims and helped claw back roughly $562 million in losses. Earlier this year, a coordinated international action led to 276 arrests across pig butchering networks operating out of Southeast Asia. The scam centers themselves are often the brutal end of the supply chain, with trafficked workers forced into running the chat operations under threat. That detail rarely makes it into the headlines, but it does explain why these scripts feel so polished and so relentless.

If you're worried someone you know could fall for something like this, here's what to tell them

The smart move this week is a five minute phone call to a parent or grandparent. If they look confused when you describe this, they probably need to hear it again. The scams already know to skip the bank and go straight for the door, so the warning needs to do the same.

Real institutions do not send someone to your house for cash. No legitimate bank or investment platform will ever ask you to liquidate an account and hand the money to a courier carrying a code phrase. If a relative mentions a "flagged" account, a "protective" wallet transfer, or a sudden need to convert savings to precious metals, that is the moment to intervene. The FBI also recommends cutting all contact after any unsolicited wrong-number text, refusing to share home addresses with online contacts, and watching for anyone who escalates affection or urgency too quickly. None of this is technically new advice, but the courier wrinkle is, and it is the part that turns a slow-burn investment scam into something closer to a stickup at the front door.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

UFC Just Paid their Fighters in a Trump-Family Stablecoin - on the White House Lawn

For the first time in the sport's history, UFC fighters walked off the South Lawn of the White House with bonus checks denominated in a stablecoin tied to the president's own family business.

UFC Freedom 250 went down on June 14, the same day the United States hit its 250th birthday and President Donald Trump turned 80. The promotion staged the card on the executive mansion's lawn, the first time the UFC has ever held a fight night on government grounds. While the spectacle alone would have made headlines for weeks, what's getting just as much attention is the way the post-fight bonus pool was constructed. There has never been a UFC payout that mixed a sitting president's family token with a federally owned backdrop, and that combination is what has lawmakers, ethics offices, and crypto Twitter talking at the same time.

World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture Trump and his sons launched with the Witkoff family in late 2024, served as the presenting partner of a brand new Performance of the Night pool. The firm dropped $250,000 into that pool and paid out the winners in USD1, its own US dollar-backed stablecoin. Crypto.com handled a separate Fight of the Night pool worth roughly $1 million in CRO. Stack it all together and four fighters split about $1.65 million in fight-night bonuses, a number UFC says is the largest single-night payout in promotion history. It is also the first time a stablecoin issuer has acted as a named sponsor of a UFC post-fight bonus, which is its own kind of historical footnote regardless of who happens to own the issuer.

The Bonus Math, and Who Cashed In

Two fighters walked away with $400,000 apiece for Fight of the Night, paid by Crypto.com in CRO. Two more pocketed $425,000 each for Performance of the Night, with World Liberty Financial covering the top-up portion in USD1. That puts each individual bonus well above the $50,000 figure UFC fans are used to seeing on these cards, and it reframes what a post-fight bonus even looks like in 2026. The promotion has experimented with sponsor-funded bonus pools before, but never with a stablecoin issuer attached to a sitting president's family. For fighters near the bottom of the card, where take-home pay sometimes lags behind the marketing, a $425,000 check is genuinely life-changing money no matter what wallet it lands in.

What World Liberty Financial Actually Is

USD1 is World Liberty's flagship product, a dollar-pegged stablecoin that has quietly grown into one of the larger names in the category. Its market cap is now sitting above $5 billion, putting it in the conversation with stablecoins from Circle, Tether, and PayPal even if it remains a smaller player on most exchanges. World Liberty Financial itself was co-founded by Trump, his sons, and Steve and Zach Witkoff, with the president listed publicly as the company's "Chief Crypto Advocate" before he took office again. The firm has built relationships with several large overseas investors and has pushed hard for the kind of federal stablecoin framework that Congress has been chewing on for the better part of a year. Hosting USD1 logos on a UFC card at the White House is, fairly or not, an extremely loud marketing moment.

The Conflict-of-Interest Cloud

Not everyone watching the fights was clapping. Reporting around the event noted that USD1 is backed in part by a UAE-linked firm tied to Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a connection that has drawn questions from lawmakers and ethics watchdogs about foreign exposure to a presidential family's crypto vehicle. There is also an existing line of scrutiny around a roughly $500 million investment from a UAE-linked entity into World Liberty's broader operations, alleged by some observers to blur lines that should be cleaner. Critics argue that paying out bonuses on federal property, using a token issued by the president's family, is exactly the kind of arrangement campaign-finance and ethics rules were written to flag. World Liberty has said the sponsorship is a straightforward commercial deal and that USD1 functions like any other dollar-backed stablecoin in the market. The optics, however, are going to keep this story alive long after the cage gets disassembled.

Another Mainstream Moment for Crypto

Strip away the politics for a second and there is still a pretty wild story underneath. A live UFC event was settled, at least in part, in a stablecoin, in front of the largest combat sports audience of the year, on the White House lawn. Crypto.com's CRO bonus pool got far less coverage but tells you something similar about where sports sponsorships are heading, with native token payouts becoming a normal line item for major promotions. If you are a fighter and your purse arrives in a stablecoin, you can hold it, swap it for dollars in a few clicks, or push it onto a hardware wallet by the time you have left the locker room. The friction that used to make crypto payments feel exotic is mostly gone, and Saturday night made that very visible. The hard part going forward will be untangling, in the public's mind, where promotional sponsorships end and political conflicts begin.

What is clear is that USD1 just got the kind of branded exposure that money usually cannot buy, and that World Liberty Financial is happy to keep stacking high-visibility partnerships even with regulators and ethics offices watching. Whether the lawmakers asking tough questions about the deal manage to slow that down is a separate problem. For now, four fighters are walking around with the heaviest bonus pool in UFC history, half of it sitting in a stablecoin with the Trump name attached. That is genuinely new territory, both for crypto and for the sport, and it is unlikely to be the last time the two collide on a stage this big.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
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