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BackPCT Litigation Trust Sues Swan Bitcoin for Nearly $1 Billion in Assets
PCT Litigation Trust Sues Swan Bitcoin for Nearly $1 Billion in Assets
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Decrypt5/18/2026Law3 min read

PCT Litigation Trust Sues Swan Bitcoin for Nearly $1 Billion in Assets

Quick Look

  • PCT Litigation Trust has sued Swan Bitcoin, alleging the firm used inside information to withdraw nearly $1 billion in assets before Prime Trust's 2023 collapse.
  • The suit seeks repayment of 11,992 BTC, stablecoins, and XRP.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

PCT Litigation Trust has filed a lawsuit against Swan Bitcoin, seeking the return of nearly $1 billion in assets. The trust alleges that Swan Bitcoin used insider information to withdraw these assets before the collapse of Prime Trust in 2023, thereby avoiding significant losses.

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In brief

PCT Litigation Trust sued financial services firm Swan Bitcoin seeking repayment of nearly $1 billion in assets.

The lawsuit alleges that Swan used inside information to avoid significant losses from the Prime Trust collapse in 2023.

The suit seeks repayment of nearly 12,000 Bitcoin along with stablecoins, XRP, and more.

Electric Solidus, Inc, which operates as Bitcoin services firm Swan Bitcoin, was named as a defendant in a newly filed lawsuit in Delaware Bankruptcy Court that aims to recover nearly $1 billion worth of cryptocurrency linked to the 2023 collapse of Prime Trust.

The suit, filed by PCT Litigation Trust—a trust created for the distribution of assets and litigation pursuit related to Prime Core Technologies—claims that Swan was able to avoid major losses in 2023 when the former crypto custodian was forced to shut down and file for bankruptcy, citing the firm’s “unrivaled access to inside information.” The suit was first reported by Blockspace.

“Swan—unlike most of Prime’s customers—did not suffer significant losses because Swan had insider, non-public information,” the suit says. “Swan knew to transfer fiat and crypto from Prime immediately prior to Prime filing for bankruptcy to avoid catastrophic losses.”

Prime Trust was forced to shut down by Nevada regulators in June 2023 after it was determined the firm was heavily in debt, and unable to service customers. That August, the custodian filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on account of its financial woes, with early regulatory filings indicating it owed as much as $82 million to customers from missing fiat deposits.

Prior to its bankruptcy filing, Swan was able to transfer nearly $1 billion worth of assets at today’s prices, led by 11,992 BTC currently valued around $917 million, that the suit alleges belongs to Prime debtors.

While typically these funds could be clawed back based on a 90-day lookback period, also known as a preference period, the suit alleges that Swan took steps to circumvent that potential.

“Upon learning non-public information indicating that Prime was on the cusp of bankruptcy, Swan recognized that offloading its entire business from Prime could expose it to enormous preference liability. Swan thus undertook efforts to shield itself from such exposure,” the suit reads.

The suit further details a key link in the firm’s relationships was via a “senior executive” at Prime, who “also served as a compensated outside advisor to Swan.”

According to the filing, this executive’s standing provided access to inside information. and the individual was responsible for initiating encrypted conversations with Swan CEO Cory Klippstein prior to meetings with regulators from Nevada.

“On May 25, 2023, in the midst of these communications and one day before Prime’s meeting with Nevada FID, Swan notified Prime that it wanted to transfer its entire business from Prime,” the filing says.

The exposure stated in the filing includes around $22.4 million in USD, as well as $5 million in dollar-backed stablecoins and 91,444 XRP, or $126,000 worth of the Ripple-linked token.

“Prime Trust held customer property in individually-owned trust accounts. The bankruptcy estate is now trying to take assets it held in trust as custodian, from a party that never received them. Customer assets held by a trust company are not available to general unsecured creditors, and we expect the courts to say so,” a representative for Swan Bitcoin told Blockspace.

Open Questions

  • Will Swan Bitcoin be found liable for preference liability?
  • What will be the court's ruling on customer assets held in trust accounts?
  • What is the exact nature of the relationship between the senior executive and Swan Bitcoin?
  • What specific actions did Swan Bitcoin take to circumvent the preference period?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Decrypt.

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