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Bittrex Bankruptcy Bombshell: $500M in Phantom Transactions Exposed

Bittrex Bankruptcy Bombshell: $500M in Phantom Transactions Exposed

Author:
Coingape
Published:
2025-11-07 11:58:10
12
1

Another day, another crypto exchange meltdown—but this one’s got receipts. Bittrex’s bankruptcy filings just spilled the beans on half a billion dollars in suspicious activity. Who needs auditors when you’ve got bankruptcy court, right?


The $500M Question

Buried in the legal rubble: transactions that smell fishier than a week-old tuna sandwich. Fake volume? Wash trades? The docs don’t say—but they’re screaming ‘accounting creativity.’


Regulators’ I-Told-You-So Moment

Watchdogs have side-eyed crypto exchanges for years. Now they’ve got Exhibit A for their ‘told-you-so’ museum. Meanwhile, traders are left holding the bag—classic finance circus.


Crypto’s Eternal Cycle

Exchange implodes, ‘transparency’ promises follow, rinse and repeat. But hey—at least the blockchain is immutable! (The off-chain books? Not so much.)

$225M Crypto Scam Exposed U.S. Links Funds to Trafficking and Fake Exchanges

Bittrex’s bankruptcy case seems to have got messier. A new analysis claims the exchange’s filings include over $500 million worth of suspicious and possibly fabricated crypto transactions and that could change how much creditors and customers eventually get back.

Regulatory researcher Pasha Onur, who reviewed the documents, told DL News, “Certain patterns in the filed documents immediately raised serious red flags.” 

His findings point to tens of thousands of unlikely or repetitive transfers, including transactions that don’t make economic sense.

Thousands of Transactions Don’t Add Up

Onur’s review found more than 21,500 withdrawals that were below Bittrex’s own minimum withdrawal limit. The exchange charged a $35 minimum for withdrawals and added extra fees on top, yet somehow, these smaller transactions were still processed.

Even stranger, the filings show over 10,000 identical Bitcoin withdrawals – each for the exact same fractional amount, all on the same day. 

DL News also found over 200 transactions tied to “LMC”, a token linked to LoMoCoin – a blockchain that stopped operating in 2021, two years before these supposed transactions happened.

“Our analysis of court documents and Bittrex hot and cold wallets reveals over $500 million in fabricated transactions filed with the bankruptcy court across multiple dockets,” Onur said.

What It Means for Customers and Creditors

If these transactions are fake or inaccurate, they could completely throw off how much money creditors are owed. Bittrex had about 1.6 million users when it filed for bankruptcy in May 2023 but fewer than 36,000 (less than 3%) actually submitted claims.

“If withdrawal transactions are fabricated, customer account balances are wrong, meaning creditor claim amounts are incorrect,” Onur explained. That could delay payouts and raise questions about whether some claims were miscalculated from the start.

Even the top 20 creditors list, used to determine payment priority, might be based on faulty data. Among those creditors is the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), owed $24 million from an old sanctions case.

A Pattern of Compliance Failures

This isn’t the first time Bittrex has run into trouble. Since launching in 2014, the exchange faced multiple regulatory issues for weak compliance practices.

In 2019, New York regulators rejected its license application, citing poor anti-money laundering controls and fake account names like “Elvis Presley” and “Donald Duck.” 

In 2022, it was fined $53 million for processing $263 million in illegal transactions, and in 2023, it paid $24 million to settle SEC charges for operating an unregistered securities exchange.

|Square

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