Arbitrum’s Security Council stepped in this week to freeze more than 30,000 ETH, worth roughly $71 million, connected to an exploit targeting KelpDAO. The council transferred the funds from the attacker’s address into a wallet with no owner, effectively locking them in place.
The move was fast. According to Steven Goldfeder, co-founder of Offchain Labs, the team that built Arbitrum, the council’s first instinct was actually to do nothing. The idea to surgically isolate the funds came from within the council itself.

The intervention worked as intended. The attacker began moving and laundering remaining stolen funds within hours of the council acting, showing how tight the window was.
The Security Council is made up of 12 members elected by Arbitrum token holders every six months through on-chain voting. It holds emergency powers that can be exercised without a full community vote.
The freeze has renewed a long-running argument in crypto about what decentralization actually means. In its purest form, the idea is that no single group can reverse or override a transaction once it happens — often described as “code is law.”
Critics say the intervention proves that principle doesn’t hold on Arbitrum. If a small group can act on stolen funds, that same mechanism could, in theory, be used under other circumstances — regulatory pressure, for example.
Some in the community argued the decision should have gone through broader governance anyway. Arbitrum insiders pushed back, saying speed was essential and public deliberation would have tipped off the attacker.
Arbitrum’s position is that the council acts as a last-resort safeguard, not a standing authority. The transparency of its powers and its elected structure are offered as evidence that authority is delegated by the community, not seized.
The frozen funds remain locked pending further governance decisions by the broader Arbitrum DAO.
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