Key Points
- The bankruptcy estate of Terraform Labs has initiated legal action against Jane Street, accusing the firm of leveraging privileged information to offload $192 million in TerraUSD prior to the 2022 crash
- Allegations center on a confidential Telegram channel dubbed “Bryce’s Secret” that reportedly facilitated the exchange of insider information
- The trading firm purportedly liquidated 193 million UST tokens, including an $85 million transaction on Curve Finance executed mere minutes after Terraform removed liquidity
- Following the UST exit, Jane Street allegedly established short positions on Terra tokens, ultimately securing approximately $134 million in gains
- Jane Street firmly rejects all accusations, characterizing the legal action as “baseless” and “opportunistic”
A prominent Wall Street trading powerhouse now confronts federal litigation accusing it of exploiting a covert Telegram communication channel to capitalize on the catastrophic 2022 collapse of Terra’s cryptocurrency ecosystem.
The bankruptcy estate representing Terraform Labs has initiated legal proceedings against Jane Street in Manhattan’s federal courthouse. The complaint asserts that Jane Street leveraged confidential, non-public intelligence to liquidate $192 million in TerraUSD (UST) holdings immediately before the algorithmic stablecoin catastrophically lost its dollar peg.
Private Chat Channel Under Scrutiny
Central to the allegations is a private Telegram communication channel known as “Bryce’s Secret.” Prosecutors claim this chat served as the primary conduit for sharing sensitive insider intelligence. The channel derives its name from Bryce Pratt, an individual who previously interned at Terraform before transitioning to employment at Jane Street.
The legal filing alleges that Pratt maintained ongoing communications with former associates who remained employed at Terraform Labs. According to the estate’s position, these conversations provided Jane Street with critical advance knowledge before the ecosystem’s implosion commenced.
Internal correspondence referenced in the lawsuit includes a message where Pratt allegedly suggested to colleagues they should feel “slightly pleased” about possessing an “informational advantage.”
Timeline of the Disputed Transactions
According to the complaint, Jane Street liquidated its complete UST holdings on May 7, 2022. This divestment encompassed 193 million tokens, featuring an $85 million transaction executed through the decentralized exchange platform Curve Finance.
Remarkably, this substantial transaction occurred a mere nine minutes following Terraform’s discreet withdrawal of $150 million in UST liquidity from the identical Curve pool. Independent blockchain analysis conducted after Terra’s collapse had previously identified that massive Curve swap as a critical catalyst in destabilizing UST’s dollar peg. The current lawsuit now contends that the wallet executing that transaction belonged to Jane Street.
After successfully exiting its UST position while the token traded near its $1 valuation, Jane Street allegedly constructed short positions as Terra’s entire ecosystem disintegrated. These strategic bets reportedly yielded approximately $134 million in profits.
When a cryptocurrency analytics company subsequently informed a Jane Street representative that the firm had “made a killing,” internal communications reveal traders discussing strategies to “decommission” wallets following their public identification.
Firm Denies All Allegations
Jane Street has submitted a motion seeking dismissal of the entire case. A company representative characterized the lawsuit as “a transparent attempt to extract money” and asserted that financial losses stemming from Terra’s collapse resulted from fraudulent conduct by Terraform’s own executive leadership.
The firm maintains that all trading decisions were grounded exclusively in publicly available information and has dismissed the accusations as “baseless” and “opportunistic.”
The legal action also names Jane Street co-founder Robert Granieri and trader Michael Huang as defendants. It alleges multiple violations of federal securities statutes and the Commodity Exchange Act.
A 2023 federal court determination in an unrelated SEC enforcement action concluded that both UST and Luna qualify as securities under federal law, which bolsters the legal foundation of this new complaint.
Terra’s spectacular implosion eliminated approximately $40 billion in aggregate market capitalization across UST and its companion token Luna during a matter of days in May 2022. Terraform co-founder Do Kwon has subsequently faced criminal prosecution across numerous international jurisdictions.
Five days following UST’s nadir, Jane Street extended an employment offer to Terraform’s head of research. According to the complaint, he commenced employment just two weeks thereafter.



