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An unidentified sender has permanently removed around 107 BTC from circulation, currently worth approximately $8.2 million, by sending the funds in five separate transactions to one of Bitcoin’s best-known burn addresses.
The address, 1111111111111111111114oLvT2, is a long-established proof-of-burn destination with no known private key. This makes the sent funds permanently inaccessible. Blockchain explorer data from TimechainIndex.com shows the transactions were confirmed in block 950962 on May 26, 2026.
Sani, founder of TimechainIndex.com, first highlighted the unusual activity. He noted that the five transfers reached the burn address in quick succession. The address has accumulated over 807 BTC historically, much of it from early proof-of-burn mechanisms used by projects like Blockstack (now Stacks).
Someone just broadcasted 5 transactions totaling 107 BTC to the Bitcoin “burn address” 1111111111111111111114oLvT2
https://t.co/O8qeGjrzG9pic.twitter.com/oQplxtQgSd
— Sani | TimechainIndex.com (@SaniExp) May 26, 2026
This event is not the first major burn. Bitcoin has seen several high-profile intentional burns in its history, particularly during the early days of altcoin bootstrapping via Proof-of-Burn:
These deliberate burns were typically done to prove scarcity or bootstrap new protocols, unlike the current mysterious transaction.
Many early cryptocurrency projects, especially during the 2013–2015 era, used proof-of-burn mechanisms. In these systems, users sent BTC to verifiably unspendable “burn” addresses in order to:
This approach was relatively common before more efficient alternatives such as OP_RETURN transactions and smart contract-based token distribution became widely adopted.
Reactions within the Bitcoin community have been swift and varied.While Some users suggested a possible mistake involving an AI trading agent or automated system, while others viewed it as a deliberate act. Possibilities include a high-value donation to Bitcoin’s scarcity, a lost bet, or a symbolic gesture.
Sani himself commented that it “Looks like Maximus Retardimus.”
All five transactions can be viewed in detail on the Timechain Index explorer .
There is no evidence yet of it being linked to a hack or coercion. However, Sani noted that the source funds came from exchange-related wallets rather than long-dormant private cold storage.
Bitcoin’s fixed supply cap of 21 million coins makes such burns noteworthy. The 107 BTC represents a permanent reduction in circulating supply. At the time of the transactions, Bitcoin was trading near $77,000.
This event adds to the growing tally of permanently lost or burned Bitcoin. No individual or organization has claimed responsibility as of this writing.