Blockfi Users Set To Reclaim 300M Held In Custodial Accounts Decides Judge

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 07:02

Blockfi Users Set To Reclaim 300M Held In Custodial Accounts Decides Judge

BlockFi custodial wallet users could

A bankruptcy judge has ruled in favor of returning $300 million to the custodial account holders of BlockFi. The judge denied the crypto lender’s customers from laying claim to an additional

BlockFi custodial wallet users could receive a massive $300 million repayment from the bankrupt digital asset lender. On Thursday, a New Jersey judge ruled that

BlockFi Customers Lose Battle To Recover $300 Million, U.S. Judge

BlockFi custodial wallet users can

BlockFi Customers Can Be Repaid $300M Held in Custodial

BlockFi custodial wallet users can be returned nearly $300 million, as a New Jersey judge ruled on Thursday May 11 that assets sitting in the wallets belong to clients

BlockFi customers can be refunded early $300 million, after a bankruptcy judge said assets in custodial wallets belong to clients, not the troubled company. The judge

BlockFi Custodial Customers to Receive $300M in Repayment

BlockFi Customers Can Get $300 Million of Their Assets Returned

BlockFi Can Return Nearly $300M to Some Wallet

Based on a May

Judge Says BlockFi Custodial Account Holders Can Be Repaid $300

Based on a May 11th ruling, BlockFi custody wallet users may receive up to $300 million as a refund. This ruling, according to a Coindesk report, comes after a bankruptcy judge clarified

Bankruptcy Judge Approves $300M Payment to BlockFi Customers

Users with coins on custodial

A New Jersey judge has decided that BlockFi's custodial wallet users are entitled to receive back nearly $300 million worth of assets that were frozen after the crypto lender filed for bankruptcy

Users with coins on custodial accounts, not receiving any yield from their crypto, can benefit from the $300 million in assets stock on the crypto lending platform and could recover a portion of

Judge says BlockFi customers can be refunded $300 million from