Truebit’s native token TRU has plummeted by 99.9% after a suspected exploit drained over $26 million worth of Ethereum from the platform. The suspicious transaction, flagged by blockchain security firm Cyvers, involved the movement of 8,535 ETH to an anonymous wallet. The protocol has confirmed the incident and is working with law enforcement, while nearly half of the stolen funds were quickly funneled through Tornado Cash.
Truebit’s native token, TRU, suffered a dramatic 99.9% decline following a suspected exploit that drained over 8,500 ETH. According to blockchain data, an anonymous wallet (0x6C8EC8f1) received approximately 8,535 ETH, worth an estimated $26.44 million based on current Ethereum prices.
The exploit was detected by Cyvers, a blockchain security firm, which flagged the transaction due to its abnormal behavior. The company stated that its monitoring systems triggered alerts based on the pattern and scale of the transaction.
Cyvers confirmed that the ETH transfer met its internal thresholds for anomaly detection. The firm noted that the transaction patterns were inconsistent with typical activities linked to the Truebit protocol.
“More than 8,500 ETH was transferred in a single transaction, with roughly 50% moving through Tornado Cash shortly after,” Cyvers reported. Tornado Cash is often used to mask the origin of cryptocurrency transactions, raising further concerns about the nature of the transfer.
The security firm has continued to monitor the wallet and associated activity to detect any related transfers. However, it stopped short of confirming the incident as a hack, instead categorizing the activity as “anomalous.”
The Truebit team has acknowledged awareness of the event and confirmed contact with law enforcement. The protocol has not yet provided detailed information on how the incident occurred or what vulnerabilities may have been exploited.
Truebit specializes in verifying off-chain computations on the Ethereum blockchain, reducing on-chain workload. The system uses cryptographic verification to confirm the accuracy of results processed outside the main chain. No comment has been issued on whether the exploit targeted the protocol’s core features.
As of the time of writing, TRU is trading at $0.072, a steep fall from previous levels. The platform has not issued further updates on user funds or recovery plans.
The Truebit exploit adds to a growing list of thefts in the cryptocurrency space. According to Chainalysis, over $3.4 billion was stolen through digital asset-related crimes in 2025. The majority came from a few major breaches, including $1.5 billion taken from Bybit in an attack linked to the Lazarus Group.
The firm noted that stablecoins now make up 84% of illicit crypto transactions. There has also been a rise in the use of infrastructure like bulletproof hosting and fake domain services to support cybercrime.
Meanwhile, PeckShield reported a decline in crypto theft losses in December 2025, with only two major breaches recorded. One involved address poisoning, where attackers trick users into sending assets to nearly identical wallet addresses.
Another incident saw over $27.3 million drained due to a private key leak. Despite fewer monthly cases, year-on-year data shows that cybercrime in crypto remains widespread and evolving.
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