
Judge Clears ArbitrumDAO To Transfer Frozen ETH To Aave LLC
The judge signed an order clearing ArbitrumDAO to vote on transferring 30,765 frozen ETH to Aave LLC for the rsETH recovery effort.
United States District Judge Margaret M. Garnett signed a court order to allow an onchain governance vote to transfer the 30,765 frozen ETH from the ArbitrumDAO to a wallet controlled by Aave LLC. The order provides explicit legal cover for ArbitrumDAO participants: any party initiating, voting on, or participating in the onchain transfer to Aave LLC is not in violation of the restraining notice served by Gerstein Harrow LLP on May 1st.
The restraining notice transfers with the assets. Aave LLC has agreed to abide by the terms of the restraining notice as if it had been issued directly to Aave LLC, until the court vacates it, the plaintiffs withdraw it, or it expires by operation of law. The judge did not rule on whether the plaintiffs actually have a valid legal claim to the funds. The order helps move the DeFi United recovery effort forward towards restoring the backing of rsETH.
The ruling clears the legal path for the transfer authorized by ArbitrumDAO's recovery vote. The approval of the Mantle DAO loan to Aave and Aave's earlier liquidation of attacker rsETH positions brings DeFi United one phase closer to completion.

Disclaimer: Content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or other professional advice. No representations or warranties are made as to accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Use of this content is at your own risk, and you should consult a qualified professional before making decisions. No fiduciary or advisory relationship is created

Aave Liquidates Attackers' rsETH Positions
Approximately 89,567 rsETH was seized from the April 18th KelpDAO attacker across Ethereum mainnet and Arbitrum V3 markets via a controlled oracle adjustment
Aave has successfully executed a controlled liquidation sequence on rsETH collateral from the April 18th KelpDAO attacker's positions on the lending protocol. Approximately 89,567 rsETH was seized from the attacker across the Ethereum mainnet and Arbitrum V3 markets.
A temporary oracle adjustment put the attacker's rsETH positions into a liquidatable state, after which the collateral was seized and swept to a recovery guardian multisig. The guardian flag was enabled, payloads executed, and then the flag was disabled, with all configuration changes fully reverted upon completion.
No other users were affected by the liquidation process. The recovered rsETH is now being redeemed for ETH through Kelp's standard redemption procedure, with the resulting ETH used to clear the deficit across affected Aave markets on Ethereum and Arbitrum. The full restoration of rsETH backing remains in its final stages.

Disclaimer: Content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or other professional advice. No representations or warranties are made as to accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Use of this content is at your own risk, and you should consult a qualified professional before making decisions. No fiduciary or advisory relationship is created

Aave Fights Back For DeFi Users
Aave LLC filed an emergency motion to vacate Gerstein Harrow's restraining notice and is requesting a $300M bond if the notice stands, defending DeFi United's recovery for KelpDAO victims.
On May 4, Aave LLC fired back with an emergency motion to vacate the restraining notice in the SDNY court. Aave argues that a thief does not gain legal title to stolen property simply by taking it. The ETH belongs to Kelp DAO victims and downstream DeFi users, not to North Korea, and therefore not to Gerstein Harrow's clients.
Aave is also requesting that if the restraining notice is not vacated, Gerstein Harrow's clients be required to post a $300M bond to cover damages to the hack victims. The DAO vote to transfer funds to a recovery multisig, which previously had near-unanimous support, could remain legally blocked pending the court's decision.
Disclaimer: Content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or other professional advice. No representations or warranties are made as to accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Use of this content is at your own risk, and you should consult a qualified professional before making decisions. No fiduciary or advisory relationship is created
