A popular online personality Ben Phillips has been uncovered as the conspirator in one such pump and dump scheme. The cryptocurrency in question is SafeMoon, an altcoin project on the Binance Smart Chain (BSC), as YouTuber Stephen Findseisen, a.k.a. Coffeezilla explained in his video published on April 13. The story was brought to Findeisen by a whistleblower. Specifically, Phillips, the former chief of SafeMoon’s crypto marketing team who now runs a prank YouTube channel, would publicly claim that he was bullish and had ‘diamond hands’, as well as urge his 749,000 Twitter followers to “buy the dip”. However, behind the scenes, he was selling the coin at an inflated price, earning himself millions of dollars.

The scheme unravels

Although no damning evidence could be found on his Twitter alone, Phillips did leak his crypto wallet address when inviting his followers to ‘buy him Starbucks’. This proved to be a mistake on his part, as it allowed anyone to closely examine his transactions. According to the detailed analysis carried out by Findeisen: To prove his point, Findeisen also created a chart that demonstrates Phillips’s selling behavior over time. Furthermore, the YouTuber listed the screenshots of all the tweets in which Phillips had made similar statements, ordered by date, along with detailed information on his dumping and even relevant BscScan links that show all the details of his transactions. Finally, Findeisen concluded the analysis with the calculation of the massive wealth that Phillips gathered thanks to his scheme:

The SafeMoon controversy

It is worth noting that almost one year ago, Finbold reported on analysts’ warnings about SafeMoon potentially being a pump-and-dump coin, despite the team touting it as a decentralized finance (DeFi) token that would skyrocket in price.  In early March, SafeMoon’s Vice President Charles Karony announced he was stepping down from his role, citing his wish “to return to college & complete my degree.” In a series of tweets, Karony praised the team and the entire SafeMoon community for their accomplishments. Interestingly, Karony’s announcement came after the filing of a securities class action lawsuit against SafeMoon and its celebrity promoters in the U.S. District Court in California, accusing them of the alleged participation in a pump-and-dump scheme related to the SafeMoon tokens.  At press time, the SafeMoon token was trading at $0.0000005566, up 0.38% over 24 hours and down 1.92% across the previous seven days, as per CoinMarketCap data. Watch the full investigation here: