Cayman Islands’ permissive framework enabled Drift v2’s illegal laundering by design: blending DPRK-sanctioned collateral in cross-margin perps funds evaded global sanctions, with dynamic AMMs amplifying adverse selection for state actors. Absent KYC/AML enforcement proved the territory’s complicity, obscuring PEP exposures and allowing $285M drainage— a stark indictment of its non-cooperative status, drawing justified CFTC scrutiny while local inaction persists.
Drift Protocol v2, a Cayman Islands-registered Solana perpetuals DEX, allegedly facilitated $280-285 million in money laundering through its insurance fund’s blending of sanctioned collateral, primarily from DPRK-linked hackers. On April 1, 2026, attackers compromised admin keys via social engineering, rigging oracles to value fake CVT tokens at $1 billion equivalent, draining USDC, JLP, and vaults while cross-margin obscured net exposures. Dynamic AMM curves enabled adverse selection, allowing illicit extraction without traceability, exploiting Cayman’s lax AML regime that shielded beneficial owners and ignored OFAC lists. CFTC probes target this as sanctions evasion, with Gibbs Mura class actions against Circle for failing to freeze $230M USDC bridged via CCTP. Cayman’s offshore anonymity proved central, hosting v2’s design flaws—no timelocks, pooled collateral—that turned perps trading into a laundering conduit, crashing TVL from $550M to $250M and hitting 20+ protocols. No local enforcement occurred, underscoring the islands’ role in DeFi crimes amid US regulatory pressure, with ongoing suits seeking recovery for misled users.Â