The pseudonymous Twitter user and blockchain investigator Officer’s Notes believes they may have been a suspect in the $195 million Euler Finance hack. In an April 4 Twitter thread, the security researcher stated, “Seems like I was a suspect in this case, as usual.”
The Euler team has denied that Officer's Notes was a suspect, claiming instead that the researcher was helpful in the investigation.
they urgently woke me up in the middle of the night and been asking for help when the attack happened… we even had a google meet call lmao WTF Euler was this just to get my GitHub access data logs from my OpSec repo (which I did lol)…Seems like I was a suspect in this…
Officer’s Notes, also known as Officer_cia, is a security researcher, blogger, and auditor for blockchain security firm Pessimistic, according to the user’s Twitter bio. Their blog posts are featured on Pessimistic’s official website and contain in-depth explanations of crypto security topics. They also maintain the Crypto Op Sec Self Guard GitHub repo, which features privacy tools for crypto users.
In their Twitter thread, Officer’s Notes stated that the Euler team woke them up “in the middle of the night,” asking for access data logs from the Op Sec repo, including IP addresses of people who have visited it. Officer's Notes complied with the request after being told “This data was crucial in the investigation.”
Officer’s Notes expressed remorse for handing out this information, seeing it as a violation of readers’ privacy:
The blogger stated they might have been seen as a suspect in the Euler hacking case but protested the notion because they were too busy to commit any such crime:
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