China has accused the United States of covert involvement in what is now considered one of the largest Bitcoin thefts in history, a $4 billion hack dating back to 2020 that has evolved into a geopolitical dispute over digital assets. The controversy centers on the LuBian mining pool, a China-based Bitcoin collective that suffered a major breach on December 29, 2020, losing 127,272 BTC, then valued at roughly $3.5 billion . The coins, owned by Chen Zhi of Cambodia’s Prince Group, remained dormant for nearly four years until the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced in October 2025 that it had seized 127,000 BTC and charged Chen. A Lubian-linked wallet has moved 11,886 BTC (~$1.3B) within a day of a DOJ filing. @lookonchain and @ArkhamIntel have tracked flows as @TheJusticeDept details the Lubian Bitcoin transfers in a Forfeiture Case. #Bitcoin #CryptoLaw https://t.co/Tz6XS1DxvB — Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) October 15, 2025 Did Washington Crack the LuBian Hack? Blockchain Forensics Hint at a Hidden Operation Chinese commentators and blockchain analysts argue that the seized Bitcoin may be the same as the LuBian funds, implying American authorities could have accessed them years earlier through a covert operation. Blockchain forensics from Arkham Intelligence and Elliptic show that wallet addresses in the DOJ’s indictment match those linked to the 2020 LuBian hack. On-chain records indicate that on the day of the attack, LuBian’s main wallet transferred 127,272 BTC to an unknown address, nearly the same amount later seized by U.S. officials. The 2020 breach exploited a flaw in LuBian’s 32-bit pseudo-random key generator, similar to the “MilkSad” cryptographic flaw revealed in 2023. Source: Weixin The defect made it possible for attackers to brute-force thousands of wallet keys within hours, draining more than 90% of LuBian’s holdings. For years, the stolen Bitcoin remained unmoved. LuBian and Chen Zhi sent over 1,500 messages via Bitcoin’s OP_RETURN function in 2021 and 2022, pleading with the hackers to return the assets and offering a ransom. No response was ever received. In June 2024, blockchain trackers observed renewed movement from the dormant wallets. About 127,000 BTC were transferred to new addresses, later tagged by Arkham as belonging to the U.S. government. The DOJ’s announcement of the seizure came months later, a sequence that Chinese observers say raises questions about when and how the U.S. obtained access to the private keys. The DOJ has not disclosed its technical methods but claims the assets were “linked to illicit operations and laundered through mining networks operating in China and Iran.” However, on-chain data reviewed by analysts suggests the funds originated directly from LuBian’s compromised wallets. Dormant LuBian Wallets Move $3.1B in Bitcoin Amid U.S. Enforcement Pressure Adding to the confusion, LuBian-linked wallets have shown new activity since the DOJ’s announcement. On October 15, blockchain monitoring firm Lookonchain reported that a long-dormant address moved 11,886 BTC (about $1.3 billion) to several new wallets . A week later, on October 22, another 15,959 BTC (worth $1.83 billion) was transferred to four additional wallets , according to OnChainLens. LuBian-linked wallets move 15,959 BTC worth $1.83B, marking the second transfer in two weeks after the Oct 15 movement of 11,886 BTC worth $1.3B following the DOJ case. #Bitcoin #Lubian #DOJ https://t.co/SLHs8g9uJF — Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) October 22, 2025 Analysts debate whether the transfers are defensive moves or reallocations ahead of potential liquidation. All related wallets remain sanctioned, and Chen Zhi’s whereabouts are currently unknown. The LuBian case has become a cautionary tale for DeFi and crypto infrastructure security, and the hack has become a reference point for crypto’s early security failures. The incident shows the dangers of weak random number generation, also affecting firms like Wintermute , which lost $160 million in 2022 due to similar vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, both the U.S. and the U.K. have been involved in separate large-scale Bitcoin seizures tied to Chinese-linked operations. In a parallel case, British authorities are managing a £5 billion ($7.2 billion) Bitcoin trove confiscated in 2018 from Chinese fraud suspects. The U.K. High Court is currently deciding whether to return the funds to 130,000 Chinese investors or retain most of the proceeds for the government. The post China Accuses U.S. of Secret Role in $4B Bitcoin Hack – What’s Really Going On? appeared first on Cryptonews .