Arbitrum’s Security Council has frozen 30,766 ETH tied to the KelpDAO exploit, moving the funds out of an address on Arbitrum One and into an intermediary wallet that now requires further governance action to unlock. At roughly $71 million, the move was large enough on its own. What made it more consequential was the method: a crypto governance body stepping in directly to override the normal finality of chain-held funds.
ARBITRUM RECOVERS $70.9M FROM KELPDAO EXPLOITER
“We appreciate the recent decision by the Arbitrum Security Council to take action in response to the LayerZero-DVN/rsETH incident of April 18. Over the past two days, the KelpDAO team has worked closely and constructively with members of the security council […] We would like to particularly acknowledge the exceptional efforts of Security Alliance’s SEAL 911 among countless others, whose coordination, information structuring, and stakeholder engagement were instrumental in bringing clarity and urgency to this process,” KelpDAO via X.
Arbitrum Sparks Fresh Decentralization DebateThat left the industry arguing over two different questions at once: whether the recovery was justified, and what it says about the systems involved. Griff Green, a member of Arbitrum’s Security Council, framed the decision as an extraordinary but necessary intervention.
so basically Arbitrum security council moved $71 million in ETH out of the hackers wallet
desperate times shows the true nature of crypto space
the security council that made this decision are just 12 people, likely in the same location
while this is really great news
He pushed the point further: “If your government comes after your money, only Bitcoin can save you.” That critique is more polemical than technical, but it goes straight to the fault line this episode exposed. A network can call itself decentralized, yet still retain a small, coordinated emergency body with the power to seize control of assets (when the stakes are high enough).
At press time, Arbitrum (ARB) traded at $0.1266.



















