Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit in Delaware bankruptcy court targets transfers of nearly 12,000 Bitcoin and customer assets, alleging use of non-public info.Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit in Delaware bankruptcy court targets transfers of nearly 12,000 Bitcoin and customer assets, alleging use of non-public info.

Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit seeks nearly 12,000 BTC in Delaware

2026/05/19 15:35
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Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit

The Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit is now one of the biggest legal fights still spilling out of the custodian’s 2023 collapse, with a new complaint targeting assets tied to nearly 12,000 Bitcoin and millions more in cash and tokens. The case lands in a familiar place for crypto failures: Delaware bankruptcy court, where the real battle is often less about price than about who actually owned the assets when everything started to break.

At the center of the dispute is a complaint filed by PCT Litigation Trust against Electric Solidus, Inc., the company operating as Swan Bitcoin, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. The trust is trying to recover crypto and cash it says moved out of Prime Trust before the company’s bankruptcy filing.

That immediately raises the question that keeps returning in crypto insolvency cases: were those funds part of the failed firm’s estate, or were they customer assets that should have been protected from creditors all along?

Swan Bitcoin faces a nearly $1 billion Prime Trust dispute

The Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit centers on a massive pool of assets: about 11,994 Bitcoin, $24.66 million in cash, roughly $5 million in stablecoins, and 91,144 XRP.

Based on current Bitcoin prices, the reported value of the claim exceeds $970 million. What is formally before the court, though, is the effort to recover the crypto and cash that the trust says moved out of Prime Trust before bankruptcy.

That scale matters. A claim this large does more than add another headline to the Prime Trust collapse. It turns a custody dispute into a market-significant case, especially for firms that depended on third-party custodians and assumed account structures would clearly protect customer property if a platform failed.

The complaint says Swan acted on non-public information

The complaint alleges that Swan used non-public information to avoid losses before Prime Trust failed. It says Swan asked to move its entire business away from Prime Trust on May 25, 2023, one day before Prime met with the Nevada Financial Institutions Division.

The filing states: “Swan knew to transfer fiat and crypto from Prime immediately prior to Prime filing for bankruptcy to avoid catastrophic losses.”

That allegation is one of the sharpest parts of the case. If the court gives weight to the timing argument, the dispute may not be viewed simply as a routine withdrawal before a bankruptcy. Instead, it could become a test of what companies can do when they receive warning signs about a custodian’s condition before the rest of the market does.

Why the timing matters in crypto custody bankruptcy cases

The complaint’s timing claim goes to the heart of bankruptcy fairness. If one customer or partner got out early while others stayed trapped, the estate has a stronger reason to try to claw assets back for broader creditor recovery.

For the crypto industry, that makes this more than a fight between Swan Bitcoin and the Prime Trust estate. It is also a live example of how custody relationships, internal communications, and transfer requests can come under scrutiny long after a firm collapses.

Swan says the assets were customer property

Swan has pushed back on the core theory behind the case. In a representative statement, the company said, “Prime Trust held customer property in individually-owned trust accounts.”

It also said, “Customer assets held by a trust company are not available to general unsecured creditors, and we expect the courts to say so.”

That response reframes the Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit around ownership, not just timing. If the assets were truly held in individually owned trust accounts for customers, Swan’s argument is that they should not be swept into the estate for distribution to unsecured creditors.

In practical terms, the court will have to examine the custody setup, the transfer history, and the legal status of those accounts. That is the kind of detail-heavy question that often decides who gets paid in crypto custody bankruptcy fights.

Prime Trust’s collapse keeps producing new fallout

Prime Trust’s failure began in 2023, when Nevada regulators said the custodian was insolvent and unable to meet customer withdrawal requests. The company was later placed into receivership, adding regulatory force to concerns that had already started rippling through its clients and counterparties.

This new case extends that fallout. What looked at first like the collapse of one crypto custodian has kept evolving into a series of disputes over asset treatment, account structure, and creditor rights. Each new claim adds another layer to the larger question of whether crypto firms and their customers can rely on custody arrangements to hold up when a service provider fails.

Why this matters for crypto custody

  • whether customer assets were legally segregated from a custodian’s estate
  • how courts treat transfers made shortly before a bankruptcy filing
  • how much account structure and trust language really protect users when a crypto intermediary collapses

Those questions matter well beyond Swan Bitcoin. They affect exchanges, brokers, Bitcoin-focused platforms, and customers who may assume that “held in trust” has a simple meaning in court.

A legal fight with bigger consequences

The Swan Bitcoin Prime Trust lawsuit is not just another post-collapse claim. It brings together almost every unresolved issue from the Prime Trust failure: alleged access to non-public information, disputed ownership of customer assets, and the messy line between custody operations and bankruptcy recovery.

For Swan, the stakes are obvious. For the wider market, the case may become a reference point in future crypto custody bankruptcy disputes, especially when firms argue that assets sitting with a failed custodian never belonged to the estate in the first place.

That is why this Delaware bankruptcy court fight is likely to draw attention far beyond the parties named in the complaint. It sits right at the pressure point where Bitcoin custody, customer protection, and bankruptcy law collide.

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