The Ethereum sandwich bot jaredfromsubway.eth was drained of $7.5 million, according to CoinDesk. An attacker spent weeks deploying fake tokens and liquidity pools to trick the bot into approving transfers, ultimately stealing assets including $WETH, $USDC, and $USDT. Sandwich bots exploit price discrepancies in decentralized finance (DeFi) transactions on Ethereum by inserting trades before and after target orders.
Attacker Deployed Fake Tokens Over Weeks to Drain Bot
The attacker created deceptive liquidity pools and fake tokens over a period of weeks. This prolonged setup allowed the attacker to manipulate the bot into approving asset transfers. The stolen funds included $WETH, $USDC, and $USDT. The jaredfromsubway.eth bot is known within the Ethereum community for engaging in sandwich trading, a strategy that involves exploiting token price discrepancies for profit.
FAQ
What happened to the jaredfromsubway.eth bot?
The jaredfromsubway.eth bot was drained of $7.5 million after an attacker spent weeks deploying fake tokens and liquidity pools to trick the bot into approving transfers of $WETH, $USDC, and $USDT.
How did the attacker exploit the sandwich bot?
The attacker created fake tokens and deceptive liquidity pools over a period of weeks, manipulating the bot into approving asset transfers that resulted in the theft of $7.5 million in cryptocurrency.