🚨 US Marshals Service Seizes Assets in Theft Case: Related Address Launches Solana Meme Coin LICK, Crashes 97%
Another "pump and dump" story, but this time the protagonist surprisingly involves the U.S. government-seized Bitfinex stolen funds.🤦♂️
Background of the Incident:
According to on-chain detective ZachXBT, the hacker address that previously stole $40 million from the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) seized address has made new moves—deploying a token named LICK on Solana.
Rug Pull Process Review:
Developer Emerges: A young man claiming to be John Daghita (reportedly the son of the CEO of the U.S. Marshals Service asset custody contractor) live-streamed the launch of LICK on a Telegram channel. High Control: On-chain data platform Bubblemaps shows that at the launch of LICK, 40% of the token supply was held by the creator. When the market cap was below $21,000, that wallet made 4 intensive purchases. Harvesting: The market cap briefly surged to $915,000 but crashed to less than $25,000 within just a few hours. The decline reached as high as 97%.📉
2025 Meme Coin Chaos:
The script of LICK mirrors the collapse of the WOLF token in March this year. CoinGecko analysts point out that in 2025, 11.6 million tokens have gone to zero, with platforms like Pump.fun being the main cause of oversaturation.
Friendly Reminder:
When hackers (and even contractor relatives) start laundering money and harvesting through deploying “shitcoins,” PVP players should be very careful. Protect your SOL, stay away from highly controlled projects!🛡
#Solana #RugPull #LICK #诈骗警示 #Bitfinex