Chicago Crypto OTC Trading Platform BlockFills Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
Previously halted customer withdrawals due to $75 million loan losses; assets frozen after creditor lawsuit; approximately 2,000 institutional clients affected.
(Background: The core team of Zcash received $25 million in funding! a16z, Paradigm, Winklevoss all invested—will they issue tokens again?)
(Additional context: Two months, 10 DeFi protocols shut down—no technical issues, but no users: liquidity is the only moat.)
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Supported by Susquehanna International, Chicago-based crypto OTC platform BlockFills has officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. This institutional-grade platform, handling over $60 billion in transactions in 2025, quickly went from suspending withdrawals and losing executives to being sued by creditors and having assets frozen—ultimately heading toward bankruptcy.
The incident dates back to February 11, 2026, when BlockFills announced a suspension of customer deposits and withdrawals, citing “market and financial conditions,” and limited trading functions. About 2,000 institutional clients—including hedge funds, asset managers, market makers, and mining companies—immediately faced liquidity issues.
Sources report that internal losses have accumulated to approximately $75 million from loans, mainly due to crypto collateral sharply devaluing during market downturns. The platform attempted to find buyers or emergency financing to cover the gap, but all efforts failed.
On February 25, 2026, co-founder and CEO Nicholas Hammer announced his resignation, with Joseph Perry appointed as interim CEO. Hammer’s departure coincided with severe financial stress, signaling internal turmoil.
Two days later, creditor Dominion Capital filed a lawsuit accusing BlockFills of misappropriating customer crypto assets, mixing client funds, and deliberately hiding significant losses—far more serious than simple financial mismanagement.
On March 3, 2026, the situation rapidly intensified. U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil in New York issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) without prior notice, freezing 70.6 Bitcoin held by Dominion Capital and prohibiting BlockFills from transferring any assets overseas.
Judge Vyskocil cited “imminent bankruptcy risk” and the fact that “platform withdrawals have been suspended” as grounds for the emergency order, indicating the case is considered highly urgent. The court also ordered BlockFills to submit a formal response by March 17.
Thomas Braziel, founder of 117 Partners and bankruptcy specialist, openly states that once news of withdrawal suspensions emerged, the company was “speeding toward bankruptcy.” After allegations of asset misappropriation surfaced, “no reputable institution would touch this platform,” making bankruptcy protection almost the only option.
BlockFills’ Chapter 11 filing means the company seeks to reorganize its debts under court supervision rather than liquidate outright. However, for the 2,000 affected institutional clients, when and if they can recover their assets remains uncertain.