Blockchain Capital founder allegedly loses crypto worth $6.3 million in SIM swap attack

Stephens founded Blockchain Capital, a venture capital firm focused on digital assets, in 2013 alongside brother Brad Stephens

article-image

Sergey Nivens/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

Bart Stephens, the cofounder of Blockchain Capital, lost $6.3 million worth of crypto in an alleged SIM swap hack. 

Stephens filed a lawsuit against the anonymous team of hackers on Aug. 16, 2023. The identities of the perpetrators are not yet known, according to a court filing obtained by Blockworks. 

The hacks took place from May 12 to May 14 of this year, per the filing. The hackers impersonated Stephens’ brother, Brad, which allowed them to gain access to one of his accounts. They then bought a Nokia phone through Stephens’ account and carried out the SIM swap by resetting his passwords and passing two-factor authentication prompts.

The filing also revealed that the hackers messaged Stephens from his own account, telling him that they could “remotely hack anyone’s phone number in the mainland US.” They also offered Stephens a deadline to contact them via Whatsapp.

Finally, the hackers drained Stephens’ account on May 14, transferring approximately $6.3 million worth of bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH), maker (MKR), compound (COMP), uniswap (UNI) among other tokens to wallets under their control. 

The hackers also tried to jack 80 BTC and 6,500 ETH from Stephens’ custodial cold wallet, but this failed because an employee at Blockchain Capital received an email notification that alerted them to the withdrawal attempts. 

This was when Stephens first became aware that his various accounts were being attacked.

The filing also showed evidence of the hackers funneling their ill-gotten gains through decentralized exchanges to make them harder to trace. Two such exchanges were mentioned in the filing, but they were redacted.    

Stephens is predictably seeking compensation for his lost assets and the time and money spent on investigating the hack. He is also demanding a jury trial, should the hackers be found.

The alleged exploit of Stephens’ crypto accounts is reminiscent of the mid-2017 hack of crypto investor Michael Terpin — though he lost quite a bit more.

Terpin parted ways with $24 million in digital assets, but instead of going after the attackers, he sued AT&T, his cellular provider. The court found in favor of AT&T before the case went to trial.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research

article-image

Tariff front-running may have caused an artificial bounce in economic data earlier this year

article-image

Waka Flocka Flame-linked BaseDrop is raising some eyebrows

article-image

IPO’ing onchain, Ethereum scaling, and using AI for ZK

article-image

A Brexit-themed celebration of Bitcoin’s catchphrases

article-image

Judge Analisa Torres said the parties have not demonstrated that vacating her prior ruling is in the best interest of the public

article-image

Prediction markets have found a mainstream fit