Scammer returns $9.3M DAI to victim 10 months after phishing them
A phishing scammer has suddenly returned nearly $9.3 million to a victim after stealing $24 million from them in a phishing attack last September.
First noticed by Scam Sniffer on July 13, the scammer used Dai ( DAI ) stablecoin to return the funds across two transactions last week.
The first transfer saw $5.23 million returned on July 8, while another $4.04 million was sent on July 13 at 12:06 pm UTC, Etherscan data shows.
Transfers from the scammer to the victim's wallet address. Source: EtherscanIt comes 10 months after the victim fell for a $24.2 million phishing scam on Sept. 6, 2023, losing 9,579 Lido Staked Ether (stETH) and 4,850 Rocket Pool (rETH) tokens.
The victim enabled token approvals to the scammer by signing “Increase Allowance” transactions, according to Scam Sniffer’s post at the time of the incident.
Allowance is an ERC-20 token feature that enables a third party to have the right to spend tokens belonging to that owner.
Crypto market data platform CoinMarketCap and other industry players have flagged the loophole, noting that it can potentially allow anonymous developers to deploy malicious smart contracts to scam users.
No known explanation for the transfers
The recent $9.3 million return equates to a 38.4% fund return at Sept. 6 prices, though the 14,429 in staked-Ether would have been worth $47.5 million at today’s prices.
Onchain data shows the Dai ficame through an address labeled as Railgun Relay — an intermediary for the privacy protocol — shortly before being transferred to the victim.
However, there has yet to be any explanation for the sudden transfers. The scammer didn’t write an onchain message to the victim in either of the multimillion-dollar transfers.
Source: Scam SnifferEtherscan data shows that the scammer’s wallet address now has a little over $3 million in funds after the $9 million transfer.
Nearly 99% of those funds comprise the METAGALAXY LAND (MEGALAND) token from the BNB Chain.
Related: New crypto scam drains users' wallets without transaction approval
Phishing scammers stole almost $300 million worth of crypto from 324,000 victims in 2023, according to Scam Sniffer’s 2023 Wallet Drainers Report.
In 2023, Inferno Drainer and MS Drainer were the two most notorious phishing scammers, stealing $81 million and $59 million, respectively.
Pink Drainer became one of the most prominent phishing scammers this year, stealing over $85 million before it shut down in May.
Magazine: Ethereum’s ERC-20 design flaws are a crypto scammer’s best friend
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Why TradFi firms could turn to bitcoin margin loans: Maple CEO
Maple’s Sid Powell said that TradFi firms have been in contact with the firm about lending and borrowing in crypto
The Daily: ECB President Lagarde rejects bitcoin for Eurozone reserves while the Czech central bank considers it and more
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said bitcoin is not an option as a reserve asset for the Eurozone’s central bank reserves, citing liquidity, security and regulatory concerns.Meanwhile, the Czech National Bank approved a proposal from Governor Aleš Michl to assess diversifying some of its country’s reserves into bitcoin.
'Inevitable collapse': Trump’s crypto push sparks concern at Paul Singer's Elliott Management: FT
The hedge fund said in a new investor letter that the “inevitable collapse” of the crypto bubble “could wreak havoc,” according to the Financial Times.Elliott’s Paul Singer has never been a fan of crypto, telling WSJ in 2023 that cryptocurrencies are “completely lacking in any value.”
Kiyosaki Dumps Gold and Silver, Projects Bitcoin at $250K by 2025