Marcus Caldwell

195 posts

Marcus Caldwell

Marcus Caldwell

@Marcus_cald

Katılım Ocak 2026
61 Takip Edilen18 Takipçiler
Evan Luthra
Evan Luthra@EvanLuthra·
🚨THE FBI CREATED A FAKE CRYPTOCURRENCY.. LISTED IT ON UNISWAP.. HIRED MARKET MAKERS TO PUMP IT.. THEN ARRESTED EVERYONE WHO SAID YES.. THIS IS THE CRAZIEST LAW ENFORCEMENT OPERATION IN CRYPTO HISTORY!!! The FBI built an actual ERC-20 token on Ethereum called NexFundAI.. 100 billion token supply.. A professional website.. Whitepapers promising "passive income through AI-powered investing".. It looked exactly like every other crypto project.. Because that was the point.. Undercover agents posed as the founding team.. Then reached out to professional market-making firms and said "we need you to fake our trading volume".. Every single firm said yes.. Here's what they recorded.. Gotbit.. A firm run by a 26-year-old Russian who publicly bragged in 2019 that he built a business faking trade volumes.. His team kept internal spreadsheets with columns literally labeled "fake volume" vs "market volume".. When asked how fast they could pump NexFundAI's volume to $1 million per day.. They said "6 hours.. It will cost about $200".. $200 to fake $1 million in daily trading volume.. MyTrade.. Run by a guy who called himself "the mastermind".. He explained the exact psychology of the scam on camera.. "We make the chart look like a really nice roller coaster ride.. That's where people jump in.. We have to make them lose money in order to make profit".. He said that on a recorded FBI video call.. CLS Global.. A Dubai-based firm.. Their bots generated 98% of NexFundAI's total trading volume.. When the FBI asked if they could sync fake volume spikes with fake news announcements.. They said absolutely.. ZM Quant.. Bots executing 10 to 20 trades per minute through dozens of wallets to look organic.. All of them knew it was fraud.. All of them did it anyway.. All of it was recorded.. And the clients were even worse.. Saitama.. A meme coin that hit $7.5 billion market cap.. The founders coordinated buys through private Telegram chats.. Sent "pump it" memes while manipulating the price.. Then dumped on retail investors.. $7.5 billion.. Built entirely on fake volume.. Every penny of real money came from retail investors who thought the momentum was organic.. One founder left Saitama and started Robo Inu.. Used Gotbit again.. Another launched VZZN.. Same playbook.. Lillian Finance.. Founder claimed to be a defense contractor who addressed Congress.. Marketed the token as funding children's hospitals.. Pocketed everything.. When the FBI shut it down.. They seized $25 million in one day.. 18 people indicted across the US, UK, and Portugal.. The CEO of Gotbit was arrested in Portugal and extradited.. Sentenced to 8 months plus $23 million forfeiture.. But here's the part that broke my brain.. Real people bought NexFundAI.. The FBI's fake token.. With zero utility.. Zero real developers.. Created solely to catch criminals.. Attracted real retail investors because the fake volume made the chart look bullish.. When the FBI pulled the liquidity to end the operation.. Those people lost real money.. On a government-issued token.. The FBI had to set up a restitution portal to pay them back.. And it gets worse.. Within 24 hours of the DOJ announcing the sting.. Someone cloned the FBI's exact smart contract.. Launched a copycat token.. Rode the viral momentum.. And made $127,000 in a single day.. Using the exact same manipulation tactics the FBI just arrested 18 people for.. Then in 2026.. The FBI did it again.. New token called Lexobit.. 10 more arrests.. Including operators extradited from Singapore.. IRS forensics showed that in one firm's trading.. 1,209 out of 1,221 consecutive transactions went straight back to wallets the firm controlled.. 99% circular.. The FBI proved what everyone in crypto suspected.. The volume is fake.. The charts are painted.. The momentum is manufactured.. And every time you buy a token because "the chart looks bullish".. You might be the exit liquidity.
Evan Luthra tweet media
Carl Moon 🌙@TheMoonCarl

THIS IS ACTUALLY INSANE!🤯 The FBI launched its own crypto token last year just to trap the scammers. They were sick of pump and dumps. So they built a real token with a real site and real branding, called it NexFundAI, and waited to see who would show up. Within weeks, scammers were lining up to fake the volume for undercover agents. Then one of them got on a recorded call and said it out loud. Their entire business model was making regular people lose money so they could profit. The FBI had all of it on tape. 18 charged. $25M seized. Arrests across 3 countries. The wildest part? The FBI ran a cleaner crypto project than half the founders out there. And the whole thing was a trap from day one.

English
981
3.9K
17.8K
6.3M
Marcus Caldwell
Marcus Caldwell@Marcus_cald·
@Farrell1969 @lex_node @lfod_dintwoe Had no ability to stop immutable contracts that still run today with zero human intervention 6. Facing 45 years in prison for writing code “Willful blindness” requires wanting the crime. Wanting privacy tools to exist isn’t that.
English
0
1
2
27
Marcus Caldwell
Marcus Caldwell@Marcus_cald·
@Farrell1969 @lex_node @lfod_dintwoe The Tornado Cash story in plain terms: 1. No KYC because no law requires it for non-MSB DeFi protocols 2. Wanted it used by good people for legitimate privacy 3. Bad actors used it, like they use cash, VPNs, and banks 4. Took no fees personally 5. …
English
1
1
3
71
lfod
lfod@lfod_dintwoe·
Would building a protocol or app intending for anyone to use it (like Monero) qualify as specific intent as they specifically intend for any person or entity to use their privacy chain? They specifically intended to do no censoring while creating maximum privacy regardless of who uses it. If any specific user is brought forward a core developer would always say yes, they specifically intended for them to use the protocol because they are a subset of everyone, right? Should the real difference be if the protocol/app is intended to be credibly neutral or not? Tornado intended to be a credibly neutral smart contract and no dev took possession of user funds. Samourai intended to be credibly neutral pool and no dev took possession of user funds. It feels like a case could be made against all privacy protocols/apps if this is a viable angle. @kkirkbos @TuongvyLe12 @lex_node @valkenburgh
English
1
0
2
263
Laura Shin
Laura Shin@laurashin·
Mad about how Tornado Cash and crypto devs have been treated by prior administrations? The new CLARITY Act draft would prevent that from happening again with what’s called a “specific intent” standard. @kkirkbos, @TuongvyLe12, and @JoshR_GSR on why that matters — and where passage odds actually stand. @DEXintheCityPod Timestamps: ⚖️ 0:00 Intro — new CLARITY Act draft drops; why there’s still a lot of work to do 📜 5:27 Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act developer protections and why the “specific intent” standard is so important 🏦 11:06 How TradFi actually feels about crypto market structure legislation 📊 14:45 What CLARITY must achieve: the US as the center for crypto innovation and the security/commodity line 🎰 18:11 Lightning round — passage odds: KK at 35%, Vy at 90%, Josh at 45% 🌸 21:32 Does the recent M&A wave, massive VC raises and Circle's Arc token presale mean it’s crypto spring? 💙 27:41 Coinbase: Get 20% off the first year of your Coinbase One annual plan at coinbase.com/unchained 📈 29:39 The least bearish bear market in history — RWA wave and institutional onchain demand ♀️ 33:41 The E11even controversy: ‘Maybe we should just not have strippers at official events.’ 🎤 34:56 SEC Chair Paul Atkins' speech recognizing that onchain infrastructure can achieve the same goals as TradFi rails 📚 43:00 The education gap: most legislators still at Bitcoin-level crypto knowledge 🤖 46:46 AI good news: Redmod AI system may detect pancreatic cancer early
English
10
1
30
5.7K
Marcus Caldwell
Marcus Caldwell@Marcus_cald·
@Farrell1969 @bgrace805 @laurashin @kkirkbos @TuongvyLe12 @JoshR_GSR it doesn’t touch the cryptographic privacy layer at all (as you note), and the moment it was proposed, the obvious counter would be “the defendant knew users could bypass it anyway.” It’s a lose-lose framing designed to sound technical without being technically sound.
English
0
0
0
26
Amanda Tuminelli
Amanda Tuminelli@amandatums·
This is exactly right👇 - the Patriot Act added Section 1960(b)(1)(C) to address informal money transfer systems that did not use a storefront, like hawalas, terrorist financing couriers, and illegal drug transporters. See the House Report from 9/17/2001 in reply. As @BirdnalsLAW explains, each of these examples necessarily involves persons taking custody of funds and transporting them *on behalf of* someone else. Even the Dep Chief of MLARS at the time wrote in 2002 that "transportation" - "service provided by a courier" - is targeted by 1960(b)(1)(C) and involves "the transfer or disposition of funds between two or more persons." See replies.
Birdnals@BirdnalsLAW

To continue clearing up misconceptions about market structure especially the parts that affect law enforcement, I encourage everybody to read our 10 Common Misconceptions About the Clarity Act materials, which I will put in the replies. In response to these comments: 1. The Clarity Act Title II is entirely dedicated to address illicit finance concerns, treating a whole range of entities which are not currently subject to BSA obligations as FIs to be FIs. I dispute that the BRCA is a "trade off" but if it is, law enforcement is getting the lion share of that trade. I can say that the BRCA is a red line issue from the digital asset industry. Take away the BRCA, and I can say with certainty every major industry advocacy group and politically involved entity withdraws support for the Clarity Act, including Title II, entirely. The bill theoretically could pass without industry support, but it almost certainly won't. 2. Yes. Developers of non-custodial software will move offshore if there aren't protections for them in the Clarity Act. I know because I am in direct communications with those developers every day. This includes developers who serve on security councils and regularly work with law enforcement. Will those security councils act like Arbitrum did with no Americans serving on them? No way to know. But I certainly would want those roles to be American vs. (insert basically any other jurisdiction). Straw man argument about "Developer A didn't help law enforcement" ignores the thousands of American developers who have, and continue to, assist law enforcement. That number of people with such expertise in America will dwindle. This isn't theoretical. It has already happened and will continue to happen under the status quo. 3. There is ZERO evidence that that 2001 Patriot Act amendments to Section 1960 was intended to address "non custodial" facilitators of ML. While it was clear that Congress intended to account for informal value transfer systems broadly, including your often cited hawala-style facilitators, who didn't have custody/control of funds in the same way conventional banking did, but it was still addressing where human or entities took physical custody of funds and moved those funds for other humans or entities. Even the party without custody had "control" in the sense that they directed who and how funds moved. This is night and day different from a software provider who never controls another human's funds and cannot direct those funds to be moved by others. There are plenty of references to "informal money transfer system[s]" but none that I am aware of regarding messaging providers, encryption providers, or purely technical infrastructure participants. 4. Yes, the BRCA will require going forward that to be convicted under 1960(b)(1)(C) to prove the actor acted with the specific intent of facilitating illicit finance. Is this a higher standard than "a person who never assisted or communicated with criminals re: money laundering but wore a t-shirt once with a washing machine" which is the current standard being proffered by the DOJ to send developers to jail? I guess. I believe the law already requires that and would be determined on appeal in the Tornado case if necessary, but generally legislative clarity is better than judicial clarity. 5. Law enforcement will always want their jobs to be easier. Which is admirable. But in America we have many laws, including the supreme law of the land in the Constitution, that are designed to make their jobs harder in the interest of ensuring fair justice and protecting against the erosion of civil liberties. No matter how noble the intent of law enforcement, the law sometimes has to step in to provide guard rails. This is one of those occasions. Do you think law enforcement advocacy organizations would be supportive of creating the 4th Amendment if it didn't already exist? Probably not. But that doesn't make it any less essential to our American way of life. I am confident that, just as law enforcement is able to put bad guys behind bars despite the burdens of the Fourth Amendment, that law enforcement will continue to be able to put bad guys behind bars despite needing to prove the bad guy actually intended to do the illegal money transmission they are being accused of facilitating.

English
5
9
40
8.1K
Marcus Caldwell retweetledi
Sasha Hodder
Sasha Hodder@sashahodler·
At today’s CLARITY Act mark-up, Senator Warren called Tornado Cash a “service.” That’s wrong, Tornado Cash was immutable software, not a company or custodial intermediary. Sanctioning autonomous code pushes threatens lawful privacy tools used by ordinary Americans.
English
5
5
44
1.5K
James Farrell
James Farrell@Farrell1969·
@Marcus_cald @JasonCoombsCEO @TheJusticeDept @keonne @rstormsf @ethereum @VitalikButerin @justinsuntron @haydenzadams @ethereumJoseph @FinCENnews @cz_binance @SECPaulSAtkins @CFTC @leamuirleyn Do you think a case with the caption beginning with "USA" means it's brought by FinCEN and not DOJ? Pro tip - FinCEN civil enforcement actions have a caption that start with "In the Matter of ..." Assessment for BTCeVinnik FINAL2.pdf share.google/PG1jUCT8Phnn4l…
English
1
0
1
42
Marcus Caldwell retweetledi
Sasha Hodder
Sasha Hodder@sashahodler·
The government literally hosted a panel arguing that “code is speech” while still prosecuting Roman Storm, Roman Sterlingov, Keonne Rodriguez, and Bill Hill. You can’t celebrate open source in theory while criminalizing developers in practice.
English
8
27
115
6.1K
James Farrell
James Farrell@Farrell1969·
@JacobRobinsonJD @lex_node @LawofCodeFM Does the user actively direct the flow of funds? Does the user individually select the relayer? Or is this all automated? And remember - that would then make the user subject to liability under 1960 if they regularly use TC under (b)(1)(B).
English
2
0
0
48
Jacob Robinson
Jacob Robinson@JacobRobinsonJD·
I woke up before 5 today because I was so excited to work on Monday’s podcast @LawofCodeFM. The topic: Developer liability and U.S. money transmission rules. I’ve never been more convinced that the prosecution got it very, very wrong in every case against devs. And I’ll explain why. You’ll hear from @valkenburgh, @amandatums & Roman Storm’s lawyer @brianeklein. We cover the history of money transmission, the criminalization of it in Section 1960 and why it’s being misapplied to software developers. It’s been about 25 hours of research and prep, plus I still have to record for another two hours then edit for 5-6. Can’t wait to share it.
Jacob Robinson tweet media
English
5
15
83
9.1K