New York Judge Delays Hearing on Aave Bid to Unfreeze $71M in ETH

A New York federal judge has delayed a hearing on a bid to unfreeze $71 million in ETH connected to the Aave protocol, extending uncertainty around the locked funds and the legal proceedings tied to them.

What the hearing delay means for the frozen ETH

The postponement emerged from case filings in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, where the matter is tracked under docket number 1:2025-mc-00527. The delay is procedural, not a ruling on the merits of the request to unfreeze the funds.

Court documents show the case is styled as Kim et al v. The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, indicating the frozen ETH is tied to a broader dispute involving North Korea. The $71 million in ETH at the center of the case remains inaccessible while the court works through its schedule.

A delayed hearing does not signal how the judge will ultimately decide. It means the arguments for and against unfreezing the funds will be heard at a later, yet-to-be-confirmed date.

Why Aave wants the ETH unfrozen

The Aave community has been actively pursuing the restoration of access to the locked WETH. A governance proposal on the Aave forum sought a direct-to-AIP vote for WETH unfreeze and loan-to-value restoration across Aave V3 instances, reflecting how seriously the protocol’s community views the situation.

Frozen assets of this scale create operational pressure for Aave users and liquidity providers, particularly when the timeline for resolution is unclear. The case highlights how traditional legal systems can directly constrain decentralized finance protocols, as the growing Ethereum ecosystem for real-world asset marketplaces increasingly intersects with regulatory frameworks.

Unlike a standard protocol parameter change, this unfreeze requires alignment between court proceedings and on-chain governance. The situation underscores the challenges facing DeFi platforms when assets become entangled in sovereign legal disputes, a dynamic that even advanced AI-assisted recovery tools cannot resolve when courts hold jurisdiction.

What crypto readers should watch next

The most immediate trigger for this case is a rescheduled hearing date. Until the court sets a new date, the frozen ETH remains locked, and any on-chain governance action to restore access would need to account for the legal constraints.

Court filings available through federal district court records will be the first place new developments appear. Readers tracking this case should monitor the docket for scheduling orders or motions from either party.

The delay extends a period of uncertainty for Aave stakeholders. As the crypto industry navigates an evolving legal landscape, from new blockchain launches to DeFi governance disputes, any resolution depends on the court’s timeline rather than protocol governance alone.

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.

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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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