Aave founder Stani Kulechov is facing scrutiny following reports of a $10 million governance token acquisition executed just hours before a critical protocol vote. The allegations, detailed in a ForkLog report, claim the purchase was strategically timed to secure the passage of a contentious cross-chain governance module.
Markets reacted swiftly. AAVE slid to $84.20 (-4%) as traders priced in the governance uncertainty, while CRV remained flat at $0.45.
The On-Chain Discrepancy
The controversy centers on a series of rapid-fire transactions identified by on-chain analysts. Wallets linked to Kulechov reportedly swept $10 million in voting-eligible tokens shortly before the governance snapshot. Critics argue this maneuver bypasses the organic consensus mechanism, effectively converting capital into legislative power.
The proposal in question aims to overhaul how Aave deploys changes across Layer 2 networks like Optimism and Arbitrum. While proponents argue the module streamlines upgrades, detractors fear it centralizes control.
“If a founder can buy the outcome of a governance vote 12 hours before it closes, we are not building decentralized protocols. We are building shareholder dictatorships with extra steps,” DeFi Watchdog (via X)
Governance Stress Test
This incident exposes the fragility of token-weighted voting systems. In a DAO structure, 1 token equals 1 vote. Consequently, deep-pocketed founders or “whales” can legally override the community majority if liquidity permits.
The Aave protocol has not issued a formal denial. The vote on the cross-chain module proceeds, but the legitimacy of the result is now in question. Governance forums are flooded with calls to implement quadratic voting or time-lock penalties to prevent last-minute influence swaying.