Taiko bridge exploited
The Taiko bridge, which allows assets to be transferred between the Ethereum mainnet and the Taiko Ethereum layer-2 chain, was exploited for at least $1.7 million before the network was halted, limiting losses. An attacker was able to forge withdrawal requests to appear as though they matched real deposits. Crypto security firm BlockSec said that the attacker may have gained access to a signing key that had been exposed on GitHub.
Highly active MEV bot known as jaredfromsubway.eth drained for $7.7 million
On blockchains like Ethereum, a strategy known as "MEV" (short for "maximal extractable value") allows intermediaries to profit from manipulating the structure of blocks added to the chain — often reordering or "sandwiching" transactions in ways that extract profits. Automated software known as MEV bots make a business out of this strategy, and one of the most active is a bot called jaredfromsubway.eth — likely so named after one-time Subway spokesman and convicted sex offender Jared Fogle because of its strategy of "sandwiching" transactions by placing trades on both sides, causing the original trader to pay more.
On June 20, an attacker used a series of contracts to cause the bot to grant token approvals that were later used to drain 4,427 ETH ($7.7 million). Some of the funds were then laundered through Tornado Cash.

