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Jeremy Allaire Pushes Back on Online Criticism, Reaffirms That USDC Freezes Require Legal Action - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
Jeremy Allaire is pushing back against criticism over Circle’s refusal to freeze USDC connected to the $280 million Drift exploit, arguing that stablecoin issuers cannot decide when assets should be immobilized in practice. The Circle chief executive defended the company’s position by framing freezing authority as a legal function rather than a discretionary security response. The dispute cuts to the heart of one of crypto’s most uncomfortable questions: whether a private issuer should act like an emergency law enforcer when stolen funds are still moving.
Why Allaire says legal orders matter more than public pressure
Allaire’s core argument is that Circle does not get to improvise around the law. He said the company does not decide “what is the right path or not,” and warned that letting a private company make unilateral judgments creates a “moral quandary.” He added that stepping away from what the law requires and making independent decisions would be a “very risky proposition.” That framing turns the controversy away from technical capability and toward legal legitimacy, even as critics continue to focus on Circle’s power to intervene.

The criticism reflects a broader expectation gap around stablecoins. Because issuers can blacklist addresses, many users treat freezing power as an emergency security tool that should be deployed the moment a major exploit unfolds. Allaire’s response pushes against that assumption. His position is that technical control does not automatically justify discretionary action, particularly when no legal process has compelled it. In that view, the danger is not only theft, but the precedent of a private company deciding on its own whose assets should be frozen and when.
That leaves Circle defending a narrower role at a time when parts of the market want something broader and faster. The company is effectively saying that compliance authority cannot be turned into an ad hoc crisis button just because public anger is rising. What makes the episode so revealing is that it exposes a central tension inside regulated stablecoins: users want censorship resistance until they want immediate intervention, while issuers are left navigating the line between legal duty, technical power, and public expectation. For Circle, the message from Allaire is clear. Freezing USDC may be possible, but without legal action, that does not mean it is the right or lawful move.