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Zerebro Founder’s ‘Suicide’ Revealed as Stunt—Found Alive at Parents’ Home

Zerebro Founder’s ‘Suicide’ Revealed as Stunt—Found Alive at Parents’ Home

Published:
2025-05-08 23:15:29
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Reporters find Zerebro founder alive and breathing at parent’s house, confirming suicide was staged

In a plot twist worthy of a bad crypto exit scam, Zerebro’s founder has been discovered very much alive—holed up at his parents’ house after faking his own death.

The revelation cuts through weeks of speculation, proving even ‘crypto deaths’ can be pumped and dumped for attention. Journalists bypassed the obituaries and went straight to the source: a living, breathing entrepreneur who apparently forgot the first rule of PR—don’t make your resurrection harder to explain than your tokenomics.

Another day, another founder who’d rather fake a tragedy than face his investors. At least this one didn’t rug-pull… literally.

Suspicious wallet activity

Adding to the mystique, Yu’s social media accounts began posting what were described as pre-scheduled farewell messages referencing a “deadman’s switch,” a failsafe mechanism triggering communications upon death.

One post declared the release of a coin called $LLJEFFY, which was described as his “final art piece” and “an eternal grave in cyberspace.” Despite the tragic story, on-chain analysis showed unusual activity.

Bubblemaps, a blockchain analytics firm, tracked the movement of over $1.4 million in crypto tied to wallets associated with Yu after his alleged death. The activity prompted many in the community to speculate that the entire thing was staged, culminating in accusations of a “pseudocide” to cash out.

Daniele Sestagalli, founder of Wonderland, shared a purported private message from Yu in which he described his actions as an escape from harassment and threats. Yu has not publicly confirmed or denied the statement.

Murky biography

According to The Standard, Yu’s biography and claimed history are murky. He claimed affiliations with Stanford, Northeastern, and Arizona State and described himself as a software engineer based in Santa Cruz.

The Legacy.com obituary also included these details and called him a coding prodigy. However, reporters were unable to verify these claims.

When approached by reporters this week, Yu declined to comment on the hoax or whether he profited financially. He was reportedly agitated over being found and accused the media of endangering his safety.

Yu said:

“I’ve been harassed. If you can find me, other people can find me.”

He also asked the reporters to preserve his privacy for safety reasons.

According to the report, no law enforcement agencies have publicly commented on the matter, and it remains unclear whether an investigation is underway.

|Square

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