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Exposed: How Crypto Beast’s $11M ALT Meme Coin Scam Rocked the Market

Exposed: How Crypto Beast’s $11M ALT Meme Coin Scam Rocked the Market

Author:
Tronweekly
Published:
2025-07-23 08:30:00
16
2

The crypto underworld just got another black eye—this time from an $11 million rug pull.

Crypto Beast's ALT meme coin promised moon shots but delivered exit scams. Here's how they did it.

The playbook: hype, dump, disappear

Pump-and-dump schemes aren't new, but this one had meme coin degenerates lining up like it was a free airdrop. Liquidity vanished faster than a Bitcoin maximalist's patience for altcoins.

Where regulation meets recklessness

While the SEC chases billion-dollar ICOs, these micro-scams slip through—proving once again that crypto's 'wild west' era is alive and well. Some things never change... except your portfolio balance after these scams.

Another day, another 'decentralized' grift. At least the scammers are keeping things interesting.

Meme coin Scam

  • ZachXBT uncovered an $11 million meme coin scam tied to popular crypto influencer Crypto Beast.
  • The details shared that the influencer was connected to about 45 wallets holding a 10% supply of the token.
  • This sold a significant amount of the tokens after successfully convincing followers to invest.

Earlier today, it was discovered that popular crypto influencer Crypto Beast was involved in a major memecoin scam. The online investigation showed that the influencer was connected to about 45 wallets.

Over the last few days into the month of July, Crypto Beast used his X account to aggressively “shill” the meme project. He came out with strong claims likeand others projecting the token as the next billion-dollar potential project.

After successfully hyping up the token and using his followers to pump the price of the token, with no pity, he allegedly dumped it on all the holders.

How He Carried Out The Meme Coin Scam

Certain projects in the market seek promotions or endorsements from prominent influencers, whales, and well-known figures in the crypto space. This is done to lure new buyers and investors. The ALT meme project followed a similar script.

As the month of July started, Crypto Beast, a well-known crypto figure with over 700,000 followers on X, began promoting a meme coin called ALT. The influencer claimed that through this meme coin, he WOULD change the lives of many people, and even called it the next 100x play with a million-dollar potential.

meme coin

Source: ZachXBT (X)

A few days after consistently pushing for the token, the token’s price saw a drastic fall, signaling that the token controllers sold their holdings. Immediately after this price fall, Crypto Beast immediately shared his public wallet, claiming he bought about $50,000 worth of the token. The community speculates that this was done in order to limit his association with the token dump.

He also went forward to delete all his promotional tweets linked to the token. But ZachXBT started an investigation around the project. The details shared by ZachXBT revealed that numerous wallets, about 45 of which have been found so far, held about 89 million ALT tokens.

Screenshot 20250722 215640 X

Source: ZachXBT (X)

This number made up 10% of the tokens’ total supply. The investigation also showed that all 43 wallets sold their holdings, and more importantly, it revealed that this is not the first pump-and-dump scheme or meme coin scam that Crypto Beast has been involved in.

Other ones like Alpha, Rich, YE RUG, and ACE were also some of the meme scams he was involved in. The influencer deactivated his X account and then made a comeback with crypto giveaways.

20250722 221404

Source : Cryptorugmuncher (X)

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