Unbelievable! Arbitrum’s $71M Ether Frozen After Kelp Hack – You Won’t Believe What Happened Next!

Ah, dear reader, it appears that out of a dozen dazzling council members, nine, yes, a staggering nine, opted for a resounding yes! This little detail alone gives you a rather splendid insight into the delightful chaos and serious deliberations brewing within the hallowed halls of Arbitrum’s security council before they executed their most riveting maneuver in yonks.

A Council Under Pressure

Our gallant Griff Green, a stalwart member of this esteemed council, confided that the poor dears wrestled with this decision for a good long while-hours, mind you! They danced around topics of a technical, practical, ethical, and, dare I say, political nature, like a troupe of confused ballerinas before finally casting their votes.

“We did not make this decision lightly,” Green chirped on the eternally riveting platform known as X. Ultimately, the council decided to whisk away 30,766 Ether-worth a jaw-dropping $71.2 million-from a wallet so scandalously tied to the Kelp protocol exploit and into what Arbitrum charmingly labeled as “an intermediary frozen wallet.” How positively chilling!

I’m a member of the Security Council & I can tell you we did not make this decision lightly, there were countless hours of debates, technical, practical, ethical and political.

But all it takes for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing, so today, we decided to do…

– Griff Green – griff.eth (@griffgreen) April 21, 2026

The funds, bless their little hearts, are now utterly untouchable by the address from whence they came. Only further action from Arbitrum’s governance can possibly shift them. How delightfully convoluted!

Oh, and let’s not forget about law enforcement, who were undoubtedly part of the riveting discussion. Arbitrum has confirmed that the council worked hand-in-hand with our gallant authorities before embarking on their grand escapade-a twist that makes this incident particularly juicy compared to the usual back-and-forth that follows a DeFi hack.

The Arbitrum Security Council has taken emergency action to freeze the 30,766 ETH being held in the address on Arbitrum One that is connected to the KelpDAO exploit. The Security Council acted with input from law enforcement as to the exploiter’s identity, and, at all times,…

– Arbitrum (@arbitrum) April 21, 2026

The Hack That Started It All

Now, allow me to regale you with the tale that sparked this delightful debacle. It all began on a fateful Saturday when Kelp-a rather ambitious liquid restaking protocol-was struck through its LayerZero-powered bridge. Reports suggest that the dastardly theft totaled at least $293 million. Quite the sum for a weekend caper!

LayerZero, the cross-chain messaging protocol involved, quickly pointed an accusatory finger at none other than North Korea! How original! But wait, the damage didn’t stop with Kelp. Our crafty perpetrator used those pilfered Kelp tokens to charm other cryptocurrencies out of Aave, the lending platform. Such audacity!

This little maneuver left Aave clutching what risk managers so delicately termed bad debt-losses that spread like wildfire through the interconnected web of the crypto lending market. It’s enough to make one weep for the state of fiscal responsibility!

So a council can just freeze 30k eth and we’re still calling this decentralized?

– Sandy.ETH (@david_lee2085) April 21, 2026

Backlash From The Community

However, not all hearts were warmed by Arbitrum’s swift response. On X, several users took to their digital soapboxes, arguing vehemently that a blockchain capable of freezing funds at council whim cannot in good faith claim to be decentralized. Oh, the irony!

This criticism strikes at a longstanding tension in the crypto realm: the very security measures intended to protect users can also become the tools that override them. How positively Shakespearean!

Arbitrum assured the masses that the council weighed its responsibilities with the utmost care, seeking to avoid any collateral damage to other users or running applications on the network. Whether this assurance will satisfy the critics remains to be seen. What is undeniably clear, though, is that over 30,000 ETH is now languishing in limbo, with the next move resting squarely upon Arbitrum governance.

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2026-04-22 08:57