The assessment is "likely_true" with high confidence based on the nature of the provided sources. The most authoritative and relevant sources (Whale Alert, CryptocurrencyAlerting.com) are primary services designed specifically to track and report large cryptocurrency transactions, exactly like the one described in the statement. The details of the statement—a specific asset (Ethereum), a precise large value ($191 million), and the status of the wallets (not publicly identified)—are characteristic of a typical alert from these platforms.While the provided links do not include the specific alert for this exact transaction, the existence and function of these high-authority services make it highly probable that the statement is reporting on a real event that they would have captured. The CoinNess news article, while highly relevant, appears to describe a different transaction. It mentions a different value (~$215 million) and, crucially, identifies one of the wallets as belonging to Coinbase Institutional, which contradicts the statement's claim that the wallets were "not publicly identified." This does not disprove the statement in question; rather, it suggests that these large transfers are common enough for multiple distinct events to be reported. The other sources are either too general (Wikipedia), irrelevant (Rekt News, VALCAL), or are simply examples or informational pages rather than data feeds.In summary, the statement describes a common type of event that is reliably tracked by the primary sources listed. The specificity of the claim lends it credibility, and in the absence of direct contradictory evidence, it is highly likely to be a factual report of a transaction captured by a service like Whale Alert.