Tether’s Record $344M USDT Freeze on Tron: Scam Crackdown or Hidden Drama?
Tether just carried out its biggest single asset freeze to date, blacklisting about $344 million in USDT across two Tron wallets on April 23
Quick overview
- Tether executed its largest asset freeze to date, blacklisting approximately $344 million in USDT across two Tron wallets due to suspected illegal activity.
- The freeze was initiated within 20 minutes of a request from U.S. authorities and follows a pattern of freezing over $4.2 billion in illicit USDT.
- Tron's low transaction fees attract both legitimate users and suspicious activities, but regular users remain unaffected by the blacklisting.
- The action coincided with a lawsuit filed by Tron founder Justin Sun, raising speculation about potential connections, although Tether claims it is standard compliance.
Tether just carried out its biggest single asset freeze to date, blacklisting about $344 million in USDT across two Tron wallets on April 23, 2026. The addresses TTiDLWE6fZK8okMJv6ijg42yrH6W2pjSr9 (about $131M) and TNiq9AXBp9EjUqhDhrwrfvAA8U3GUQZH81 (about $213M) were frozen within 20 minutes after a request from U.S. authorities due to suspected illegal activity.
On-chain evidence suggests scam activity, including suspicious Facebook posts, fake $75 billion contracts, and BTC-to-USDT swaps that promise an unlikely 10% instant profit. This freeze is much larger than Tether’s previous $182 million single-day freeze in January 2026 and follows a pattern: more than $4.2 billion in illicit USDT has been frozen so far, with close cooperation from the DOJ, FBI, and other law enforcement agencies worldwide.
Tron’s low fees make it a popular choice for quick USDT transfers, but they also attract suspicious activity. Regular users are not affected, since only blacklisted addresses are frozen. So far, there has been no effect on USDT’s peg or overall market stability.
Tether just froze $344 million in USDT in coordination with OFAC and US law enforcement.
Your stablecoins are not your stablecoins. They never were. pic.twitter.com/TzIJGCTpep
— TFTC (@TFTC21) April 23, 2026
The timing is interesting: this action came
just one day after Tron founder Justin Sun filed a lawsuit against the Trump family’s World Liberty Financial (WLFI) project. Tether says this is just standard compliance, but increased attention on Tron and Sun has led to online speculation. There is no confirmed direct connection.
This situation highlights Tether’s dual role: supporting over $180 billion in circulating USDT and actively working to stop crime. It also shows the trade-off of centralization in so-called decentralized stablecoins. They are fast and cheap, but still controllable.
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