On-chain investigator ZachXBT has revealed that Circle froze the USDC balances in 16 business hot wallets on March 24, 2026, claiming the affected addresses appear entirely unrelated to one another and that the stablecoin issuer had “zero basis” for the action.
The freeze was executed pursuant to a sealed U.S. civil court order, meaning a federal judge directed Circle to blacklist the wallet addresses. The affected wallets belonged to crypto exchanges, online casinos, and foreign currency exchange services, according to ZachXBT’s public disclosure.
16
Stablecoin Wallets Frozen by Circle
Source: ZachXBT — wallets described as “unrelated” to sanctioned entities
Each of the 16 wallets processed thousands of daily transactions, a pattern consistent with active operational business use rather than illicit fund movement. ZachXBT confirmed the freeze directly with at least one affected business.
What ZachXBT Found: 16 Frozen Wallets With No Obvious Connection
ZachXBT publicly questioned Circle’s decision, asking: “How come Circle froze the USDC balance of 16 unrelated hot wallets late yesterday for a civil case?” He described the freeze request as “riddled with errors” and lacking proper review.
The investigator went further, calling it potentially “the single most incompetent freeze” in his five-plus years of blockchain investigations. He argued that basic analytical tools could have identified the wallets as legitimate business operations within minutes.
“An analyst with basic tools could have identified, within minutes, that these were operational business wallets from the thousands of transactions they process.”
The wallets span at least three distinct business sectors, with no shared transaction history, common entity, or flagged counterparty linking them. The sealed nature of the underlying civil case means the plaintiff’s identity and the legal rationale remain unknown.
Circle did not respond to requests for comment on the freeze. The company has not publicly confirmed or denied ZachXBT’s characterization of the action as lacking due diligence.
How Circle Can Freeze Wallets, and Why That Worries Critics
USDC’s smart contract includes a built-in blacklist function controlled exclusively by Circle. When invoked, it prevents the targeted address from sending, receiving, or interacting with its USDC balance. This mechanism gives Circle unilateral power to freeze any USDC holder’s funds.
This is not the first time Circle has used this capability. The company froze addresses linked to Tornado Cash in 2022 following U.S. Treasury sanctions. Those freezes, however, were tied to specific sanctioned entities with clear regulatory backing.
The distinction matters. Court-ordered freezes tied to identified criminal activity carry a different weight than freezes where the underlying case is sealed and the affected parties appear to be legitimate businesses. ZachXBT’s core criticism is that Circle did not independently verify whether the wallets warranted freezing before executing the court order.
Helius founder Mert Mumtaz used the incident to highlight broader centralization risks, stating: “This is your 10th reminder that centrally issued stablecoins are not actually yours; they can be frozen.”
The reaction echoes a recurring tension in the stablecoin market. Decentralized alternatives like DAI lack a central freeze mechanism at the smart contract level, a design choice that proponents of decentralized finance argue offers stronger property guarantees. The tradeoff is that decentralized stablecoins cannot comply with court orders or freeze proceeds of confirmed fraud.
What This Means for USDC Holders and Stablecoin Trust
USDC is the second-largest stablecoin by market cap. Any USDC holder, whether on an exchange or in self-custody, carries issuer counterparty risk. Self-custody protects against exchange failure but not against Circle’s blacklist function, which operates at the token contract level.
The incident arrives during a turbulent period for Circle. The company’s stock dropped roughly 20-25% on March 25, 2026, though that decline was driven primarily by the draft CLARITY Act legislation that would restrict stablecoin yields, not by the wallet freeze itself.
Tether has also frozen wallets in the past, including in a related case involving the Wallex exchange. The practice is not unique to Circle, but the scale of 16 apparently unrelated wallets frozen simultaneously, combined with the sealed court order, has drawn sharper scrutiny than typical freeze actions.
Multiple industry executives used the episode to argue that regulated stablecoins function like CBDCs in practice, with centralized control over user funds regardless of the decentralized infrastructure they run on.
For users concerned about blacklist risk, practical steps include diversifying stablecoin exposure across multiple issuers and monitoring on-chain blacklist activity. Circle has not indicated whether the affected businesses have a path to challenge or appeal the freeze, and the sealed nature of the case leaves the timeline for resolution unclear.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
