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You are here: Home / Cryptocurrency News / Karma Hits Fast: zkLend Hacker Gets Scammed

Karma Hits Fast: zkLend Hacker Gets Scammed

By Paul Adedoyin | Edited By Ammar Raza,April 3, 2025, 7:00 AM

zkLend
  • $5.4 million in ETH was stolen from the hacker who attempted to launder the stolen funds.
  • The attacker mistakenly used a fraudulent version of Tornado Cash, and the entire 2,930 ETH was instantly drained.
  • Certain members of the crypto community doubt whether this hacker really lost the funds or if this was a move to avoid clashing with the law.

The hacker who exploited the Ethereum Layer 2 lending protocol zkLend for millions of dollars has lost a large portion of the stolen funds to a phishing scam. It was a bizarre twist of fate for the attacker, who had initially escaped with 2,930 ETH (around $5.4 million) at the time of the attack, only for them to be scammed while trying to launder the funds.

Karma hit fast.

Hacker steals 2,930 $ETH($5.4M) from zkLend… then gets phished while using Tornado Cash.

All 2,930 $ETH($5.4M) gone — to another thief.https://t.co/O1ODLgRRTh pic.twitter.com/36AhTSgOwZ

— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) April 1, 2025

Hacker’s zkLend Stolen ETH Drained Immediately in Phishing Scam

The hacker wanted to cover the stolen assets using Tornado Cash, a well-known cryptocurrency mixing service. Instead, they went to the rogue site tornadoeth[.]cash, which had existed for years and conned victims. 

As soon as they synced with this fake platform, they lost 2,930 ETH to the fraudulent platform. By the time the hacker realized the transaction was on the fake Tornado platform, all their wallets were already empty.

This saga dates back to February, when zkLend experienced a $9.57 million exploit due to a decimal precision vulnerability. The hacker, using wallet address 0x64…9109, tampered with rounding errors in the lending accumulator to inflate the platform’s balance and withdraw around 3,700 ETH.

zkLend quickly halted withdrawals and started negotiating, offering the attacker a 10% white hat bounty and returning the remaining funds. The hacker, however, disregarded the offer and pushed those stolen assets through different channels like Railgun.

Hacker’s Claimed Loss from Alleged Phishing Questioned by Crypto Community

Despite the dramatic turn of events, some within the crypto community remain skeptical about the hacker’s claims on what actually happened. Some think that the event is a ploy to escape from scrutiny by law agencies and blockchain investigators.

They say that perhaps the attacker transferred the funds to a different address and staged the loss as a smokescreen. Others suspect that the hacker and the phisher are one and the same, orchestrating a scheme in which the money goes missing without too much scrutiny.

Filed Under: Cryptocurrency News, Crypto Scam

About Paul Adedoyin

Paul Adedoyin is a Financial Correspondent at Tronweekly with over four years of experience covering the cryptocurrency and digital asset sector. His work focuses on Bitcoin, altcoins, and DeFi, alongside crypto regulation and policy, blockchain technology, Web3, Layer 2 ecosystems, and AI-blockchain developments. He verifies reporting through primary sources such as official filings, regulatory statements, court records, and on-chain data to ensure accurate, fact-based coverage. His work has been featured on platforms like U.Today and CryptoMode.

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