Multichain stops operations over lack of funds

Cross-chain router protocol Multichain has announced that it is “forced to cease operations” because of the lack of operational funds. The announcement follows a report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis saying that withdrawals appear to be a “rug pull” by insiders. 

On July 14, Multichain’s official Twitter account announced that it will be finally halting its operations. The team said that a “lack of alternative sources of information and corresponding operational funds” has forced them to shut down their business activities.

In the tweet, the team also highlighted that the global Multichain team has not had contact with their CEO, known as “Zhaojun,” since he was detained by Chinese police. According to the team, they’ve contacted the CEO’s family and learned that Zhaojun’s computers, phones, wallets and mnemonic phrases were seized by the authorities. They wrote: 

“Since the inception of the project, all operational funds and investments from investors have been under Zhaojun’s control. This also means that all the team’s funds and access to the servers are with Zhaojun and the police.”

They added that Zhaojun’s sister notified the team of an asset preservation act, transferring some funds to addresses under her control. However, this was followed by the Multichain CEO’s family notifying the team that Zhaojun’s sister was also taken into custody by the police and is now out of contact. As a result, the team announced that it’s now halting its operations.

Related: Multichain Executor has been ‘draining’ AnySwap tokens: Report

The Multichain debacle started in May when Multichain routes were suspended due to an upgrade, and fund transfers started taking longer than expected. Following this, crypto exchange Binance halted deposit and withdrawal support for some Multichain bridged tokens because of the uncertainties surrounding the protocol.

To make matters worse for the platform, large outflows from the Multichain MPC bridge platform sparked fears of an exploit. On July 6, on-chain observers concluded that the protocol was hacked as over $100 million worth of assets were withdrawn from its Fantom bridge on the Ethereum side.

Collect this article as an NFT to preserve this moment in history and show your support for independent journalism in the crypto space.

Magazine: ZK-rollups are ‘the endgame’ for scaling blockchains, Polygon Miden founder