SafeMoon
Founded | 2021 |
---|---|
Defunct | 2023 |
Headquarters | |
Area served | Global |
Key people | Braden John Karony (CEO) |
Products | Cryptocurrencies |
Number of employees | 100 [1][better source needed] |
Website | www |
SafeMoon LLC was an American cryptocurrency and blockchain company created in March 2021.[2] The company created the SafeMoon token (SFM) which traded on the BNB Chain blockchain.[3][4][5] The token charged a 10% fee on transactions, with 5% redistributed (or reflected) to token holders and 5% directed to wallets in a different currency, Binance Coin (BNB), controlled by the coin's authors.[6][7] The token reached its all time high market cap in April 2021 of $17b.
The SafeMoon company released a minimal-function cryptocurrency wallet and announced plans to release other cryptocurrency products. The company and the token have been the subject of several controversies: having been compared to a ponzi-scheme, not delivering on products, having multiple class-action lawsuits filed against them, and facing serious fraud allegations. In November 2023, the SEC and the United States Department of Justice charged SafeMoon and its executive team with fraud, the unregistered offering of securities, and money laundering.[8][9][10][11] In December 2023, SafeMoon declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy and shut down.[12]
History
Denominations | |
---|---|
Code | SFM[13] |
Development | |
White paper | Whitepaper |
Code repository | Safemoon.sol |
Development status | Discontinued |
Developer(s) | SafeMoon US LLC |
Ledger | |
Block explorer | SafeMoon V2: BscScan |
Supply limit | SafeMoon V1: 1,000 Trillion
SafeMoon V2: 1 Trillion |
Website | |
Website | safemoon |
2021: SafeMoon version 1
SafeMoon was released in March 2021. A compound of "Safe" and "Moon". The token was released with the slogan of landing "Safely to the moon", derived from the slang phrase used in the cryptocurrency community; "To the moon" which is used to describe a crypto token "to quickly rise in price". The token had no utility and team when it was launched. Upon release, Vice reported that between 14 March and 21 April 2021, SafeMoon increased in value by 23,225% following celebrity endorsements from musicians Lil' Yachty and Nick Carter, YouTuber Logan Paul, social media hype, new exchange listings, and retail investors. At that time, Vice said that "cryptocurrencies like SafeMoon still have no real-world use."[14] These celebrities were later sued by many SafeMoon investors as part of a class-action lawsuit branding SafeMoon to be a part of a pump and dump scheme.[15] After the substantial rise in price, the unknown developers of the token appointed Braden John Karony as the CEO of Safemoon and registered as a Limited liability company with aims of providing utility to the token. Before this appointment, Karony served as a former analyst for the United States Department of Defense from January 2015 to January 2021.[3]
In May 2021, SafeMoon announced making a presentation to The Gambia to provide "technology for innovation and learning purposes".[16] The project was dubbed "Project Pheonix" (the misspelling of Phoenix being intentional), SafeMoon released a familiar crypto pitch of serving the "unbanked" and claimed to be working with local governments to adopt the token as a local currency. A company run by John Karony's mother ECG LC, was set up in May 2021 to deliver this project.[17] On 27 August 2022, John stated that his reasons for discontinuing his work in West Africa were due to supply chain problems, which is disputed by his mother in the ongoing Project Pheonix lawsuit.[18]
In June 2021, the project began beta testing of the SafeMoon wallet.[19][20] The app was officially released on Google Play in September 2021 and the App Store in October 2021.[21] Critics dubbed the wallet to be a copy of the Trust Wallet owned by Binance.[18] Thomas Smith, who was the CTO for Safemoon, left the company in December 2021 for a role as a blockchain advisor for StrikeX, however, was dismissed by the company after the fraud allegations uncovered by Stephen Findeisen.[22][23][non-primary source needed]
2022: Migration to SafeMoon V2
In December 2021, SafeMoon developed Version 2 of their token (SafeMoon V2), an updated version of the SafeMoon contract.[24] As part of consolidating to V2, the SafeMoon team implemented a deadline to migrate their tokens, or else investors would be faced with a 100% tax. The team also released a decentralised exchange titled "Safemoon Swap" as the only place where this migration could happen. In April 2022, Safemoon announced a new product, the Safemoon card. The Safemoon card was promoted as a debit card that can be used to pay for goods using SafeMoon (and other cryptocurrencies) for a 2.5% fee. Some experts criticized paying an additional fee to pay for goods, contrasting it to Crypto.com's card which instead rewards users with a percentage return in crypto depending on how much of their native token they are holding.[25] Although the card was supposed to be released in July 2022, as of December 2022 its release has been delayed.
Since the appointment of Karony in 2021, SafeMoon has announced plans to launch its own cryptocurrency exchange by October 2021, however, this was pushed to December 2022 and has again been pushed back to the end of 2023. The company also has plans to launch a blockchain, hardware wallet, and to become a macro Internet of things infrastructure on its own blockchain.[26][27][3][28]
2023: LP hack and Fraud Indictment
On 29 March 2023, hackers exploited a security flaw in the smart contract of SafeMoon's liquidity pool which saw USD 9 million worth of SFM tokens depleted from SafeMoon's liquidity pool causing a drop in the token’s price.[29] After negotiations with the SafeMoon team, the hacker agreed to return only 80% ($7 million) of the stolen liquidity and kept $2 million of the stolen tokens.[30]
On 1 November 2023, a Federal indictment was unsealed, charging SafeMoon's CEO Braden John Karony, Token Founder Kyle Nagy, and former SafeMoon employee Thomas Smith with conspiracies involving securities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering in connection with SafeMoon. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York alleged that the defendants misled SafeMoon investors about the accessibility of 'locked' liquidity and engaged in personal trading. The charges reported that as SafeMoon's market capitalization exceeded $8 billion, they fraudulently diverted millions of dollars from the 'locked' liquidity for personal gain. Karony and Smith were arrested, while Nagy remained at large.[31] The charges were brought by the SEC and the Department of Justice with FBI assistance.[32]
In December 2023, SafeMoon declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy and shut down.[12]
Criticisms and legal issues
Parallels to a meme coin
The token was described pejoratively in May 2021 as a "meme coin" alongside Dogecoin and Shiba Inu, with much of its value attributed to the result of the 2021 crypto market frenzy.[2]
The developers of SafeMoon were described as having "little proof of previous success",[5] with the token described by one financial expert as "the furthest thing from safe"[33] and that it "doesn't do anything".[33]
Security issues
In May 2021, the V1 version of the token was audited by security auditing firm CertiK, which identified a "major issue" that the project's owners have "control over tokens funded by SafeMoon's seller fee".[34][33] An owner address acquire's the liquidity pool tokens generated by the SafeMoon-BNB pool. This gives the owner control over tokens funded by SafeMoon's seller fee. This feature was later the subject of the 2022 Safemoon fraud allegations. London Capital's head of research Jasper Lawler also noted that the Manual Burn aspect of SafeMoon paired with the controlling companies' large stake in the coins opens the project up to manipulation by the project controllers.[35]
Ponzi-scheme comparisons
After the price of a SafeMoon token multiplied by 12x during a single week in April 2021,[36] opinion columnists in various financial magazines likened SafeMoon to a ponzi scheme[37] or pyramid scheme, where gains to early investors were paid only by incoming investors who expected a similar rate of return, with some citing the fact that each transaction sends a portion of the transacted value to existing holders of the token, as well as a portion of the transacted value to a wallet controlled by the coin's authors.[38] Furthermore, SafeMoon's token economics utilizes a 10% sell tax. This means that for every $1000 sale, an investor would be charged $100. Critics argued that this discouraged investors from selling, as they effectively incur a loss as soon as they invest. The tax from the new investors included distributing a small percentage of it to existing investors.[39]
2022 fraud allegations
In April 2022, Stephen "Coffeezilla" Findeisen, a prominent independent researcher who investigates crypto scams, accused the SafeMoon team of misappropriating millions of dollars.[40] According to Findeisen, SafeMoon CEO Karony had been removing funds from the liquidity pool which is the primary explanation of the crypto's price pattern (Figure 1). Findeisen found evidence of transactions which showed SafeMoon's liquidity wallet moving funds to a wallet dubbed the "Gabe (6abe) wallet" which withdrew funds to a separate company run by John Karony. Former SafeMoon CTO, Thomas "Papa" Smith, was the only person who responded to Findeisen's claims stating that funds were taken from the "locked liquidity pool" before Karony's appointment. He sent Smith evidence of this in the form of a blockchain transaction showing an outflow of 36.7 trillion tokens from the liquidity pool, dated 5 March 2021.[41]
Class-action lawsuits
On 18 February 2022, in a class-action lawsuit filed against SafeMoon it was alleged that the company was a pump and dump scheme. Logan Paul was named as a defendant along with musician Nick Carter, rappers Soulja Boy and Lil Yachty, and social media personality Ben Phillips for promoting the SafeMoon token on their social media accounts with misleading information.[15][42] On the same day, the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in a lawsuit against Bitconnect that the Securities Act of 1933 extends to targeted solicitation using social media.[43] Findeisen, who had just shone a light on the 2022 SafeMoon fraud allegations, supported the claims that Paul and Phillips were pumping and dumping SafeMoon tokens during this time which saw a decline of 96% in token price.[44] On 22 August 2022, it was documented that David Portnoy, who was also a defendant in this case, was dismissed from the lawsuit after it was revealed that he never received any compensation from Safemoon for promoting the token and that he also lost his investment from buying SFM.[45][non-primary source needed][original research?]
In May 2022, multiple SafeMoon investors filed another class action lawsuit against SafeMoon for security fraud. The lawsuit which is represented by Scott Scott, was voluntarily terminated by the plaintiff without prejudice per notice in November 2022. This means the case can be retried if the plaintiff wishes to in the future.[46][47][unreliable source?]
Project Pheonix lawsuit
As part of Project Pheonix, a separate company Emanations Communications Group LC (ECG) was set up and led by SafeMoon CEO John Karony's mother, Jennifer, to provide antenna technology to The Gambia.[48] The company has since been seized by Lex Vest Ltd.[16] As part of this venture, John invested $5 million into the project in June 2021. It was claimed that Karony funded this investment from SafeMoon's liquidity pool which was supposedly locked up.[49] As part of this capital investment John agreed 33.34% stake in the company and future profits, as well as his own personal bills, to come out of the company.[50] ECG determined that John Karony created too many regulatory risks and that due to multiple lawsuits filed against him and his company (SafeMoon), they were uncomfortable accepting any more capital investments from him. As a result, John Karony filed a lawsuit against ECG for breach of contract and accused his mother of legal trickery to remove him from ECG.[51]
ECG developed technology relating to Project Pheonix which was presented to John in December 2021. According to court documents, John had been disclosing information about developing technology for the benefit of SafeMoon to make claims on SafeMoon's website and social media accounts about the technology. He was counselled not to do so by ECG (particularly his mother) because of potential adverse effects on pending patents and other intellectual property.[52][53] In March 2022, John and his counsel met with Project Pheonix partners Sankung Jawara and Pa Alieu Jawara, and offered them an upfront payment of $350,000 to cut Jennifer Karony out of the transaction, which they refused. John then negotiated an offer to pay them of up to $4.5 million, to be paid out over time, with the understanding that Jennifer was again removed from consideration. Sankung and Pa Alieu once more refused, due to the proposed circumvention of the business partnership and John's assertion that there was a way to circumvent the legal and parliamentary procedures required for John's desired bank project.[17]
Karony's mother stated that John had not provided a plan for Project Pheonix and was not interested in the content of the financial documents, but was looking for "opportunities to take pictures of the lab to substantiate his published claims of owning ECG labs which he called 'Area 32' or 'DarkMoon'". Due to the lawsuit, Project Pheonix was abandoned. On 27 August 2022, John stated that his reasons for discontinuing his work in West Africa were due to supply chain problems, which is disputed by his mother.[17][54]
Liquidity pool hack
On 29 March 2023, it was reported that almost $9 million USD worth of SafeMoon tokens were depleted from SafeMoon's liquidity pool after hackers exploited a security flaw in its smart contracts. As a result, the price of the token fell further in value.[55] The hacker agreed to return only 80% ($7 million) of the stolen liquidity after striking a deal with the team to keep $2 million of the stolen tokens.[56]
Fraud indictment
On 1 November 2023, a federal indictment was unsealed charging Braden John Karony, Kyle Nagy, and Thomas Smith with conspiracies to commit securities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering through SafeMoon.[11] According to the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York, "As alleged, the defendants lied to SFM investors concerning whether SFM's use of 'locked' liquidity was inaccessible to the defendants, as well as their personal holding and trading of SFM. As SFM's market capitalization grew to more than $8 billion, the defendants fraudulently diverted and misappropriated millions of dollars' worth of purportedly 'locked' SFM liquidity for their personal benefit." At the time Karony and Smith had been arrested while Nagy remained at large. The charges were brought in parallel by the SEC and the Department of Justice with assistance from the FBI.[9][8][57][10]
See also
References
- ^ Safemoon Sundays: 9 January 2022
- ^ a b DeCambre, Mark (18 May 2021). "Here's What Crypto SafeMoon Is and Why It's Trending". Barron's. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
- ^ a b c "What is SafeMoon coin? A Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Dogecoin challenger". Fortune. 17 May 2021. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ Brooks, Matt (7 May 2021). "What is SafeMoon? New cryptocurrency explained, how to buy in UK - and could it rival Dogecoin in popularity". The Scotsman. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ a b Conway, Luke (26 May 2021). "Is SafeMoon Really a Safe Investment?". The Street. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ Ostroff, Caitlin (6 May 2021). "Dogecoin's 12,000% Rally Spurs Hunt for Next Crypto Winner". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ Harper, Chris (23 April 2021). "What is SafeMoon". BirminghamLive. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
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- ^ a b "Eastern District of New York | Founders and Executives of Digital-Asset Company Charged in Multi-Million Dollar International Fraud Scheme | United States Department of Justice". U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York (Press release). www.justice.gov. 1 November 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
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- ^ a b Sollitt, Shannon (19 December 2023). "Utah crypto company files for bankruptcy amid federal fraud accusations". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
- ^ "Token SafeMoon". Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ "To the Moon: How One Cryptocurrency Made People Millions Overnight". Vice News. 6 May 2021.
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- ^ a b "Cryptocurrency - SafeMoon To Implement Operation Phoenix in Gambia". The Chronicle Gambia. 18 May 2021. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ a b c "LEX VEST LTD v. Emanations Communications Group LC (2:22-cv-01226), Nevada District Court". PacerMonitor.
- ^ a b "What Happened to Safemoon, the Hyped-Up Crypto That Promised Riches?". Vice News. 9 May 2022.
- ^ Rearick, Brenden (15 June 2021). "#SafeMoonWallet: What to Know as SafeMoon Launches Its Crypto Wallet". InvestorPlace. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
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- ^ "Cooli Carlito x HALO - StrikeX". Genius.
- ^ "StrikeX Make Monumental Announcement & Appoint Thomas "Papa" Smith from SafeMoon as a Blockchain Advisor". finance.yahoo.com.
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- ^ Willing, Nicole. "Safemoon price prediction: will the price break out?". Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Armstrong, Vanessa (21 December 2021). "SafeMoon's emphatic fanbase won't let it fail". Retrieved 31 December 2021.
- ^ "SafeMoon Introduces Token Monetization Innovation". Web3Wire. 30 December 2022.
- ^ "Safemoon Liquidity Pool Compromised: Almost Lost $8.9 million Due To A Public Burn Bug". FX Leaders. 31 March 2023. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- ^ "SafeMoon 'burn' bug abused to drain $8.9 million from liquidity pool". BleepingComputer. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- ^ "SEC.gov | SEC Charges Crypto Company SafeMoon and its Executive Team for Fraud and Unregistered Offering of Crypto Securities". www.sec.gov. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- ^ Quiroz-Gutierrez, Marco (1 November 2023). "SEC says SafeMoon executives withdrew $200 million from crypto project to spend on McLarens and luxury homes". Fortune. Retrieved 23 November 2023 – via aol.com.
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- ^ Smith, Sarah (3 May 2021). "SafeMoon Audit: 9 Things to Know About the SafeMoon CertiK Findings". InvestorPlace. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
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- ^ "Is SafeMoon a Pyramid Scheme? Why Some Investors Are Skeptical". Market Realist. 23 April 2021.
- ^ "8 Things to Know Before You Buy Safemoon". 10 July 2021.
- ^ "What Happened to SafeMoon, the Hyped-Up Crypto That Promised Riches?". 9 May 2022.
- ^ "Coffeezilla, the YouTuber Exposing Crypto Scams". The New Yorker. 14 May 2022.
- ^ Cole, Ty (24 February 2022). "Soulja Boy and Lil Yachty Faces Class-Action Lawsuit In Alleged Cryptocurrency Scheme". BET. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ Lawler, Richard (18 February 2022). "Influencers beware: promoting the wrong crypto could mean facing a class-action lawsuit". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ "CoffeeZilla reveals Jake Paul's alleged crypto scams amid Safemoon lawsuit". 8 March 2022.
- ^ "Bill Merewhuader et al v. SafeMoon LLC et al".
- ^ "SafeMoon Crypto Investors Bring Another Class Action Fraud Suit".
- ^ "Safemoon – Scott Scott".
- ^ Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (9 May 2022). "What Happened to SafeMoon, the Hyped-Up Crypto That Promised Riches?". Vice.
- ^ "Five ridiculous claims from the latest SafeMoon court battle". 5 October 2022.
- ^ LEX VEST LTD v. Emanations Communications Group LC ("30 - During certain times after making his investment, John demanded payment of utilities and other personal expenses to be imposed on ECG funds to satisfy his outstanding personal bills in the amount in excess of $50,000."), Text.
- ^ "LEX VEST LTD v. Emanations Communications Group LC". Justia Dockets & Filings.
- ^ Case 2:22-cv-01226-ART-BNW Document 24 Filed 09/09/22 Page 22 of 78
- ^ LEX VEST LTD v. Emanations Communications Group LC ("39 - After June 2021, John has been disclosing more information about developing technology of ECG for the benefit of his cryptocurrency business Safe Moon. 40 - John demanded receipts of ECG Op’s related to technology expenses so he could make claims on Social Media and SafeMoon’s website about the technology Case 2:22-cv-01226-ART-BNW Document 24 Filed 09/09/22 Page 22 of 78 being developed through his personal investment. He was counseled not to do so because of potential adverse effects on pending and future patents and other intellectual property. He proceeded contrary to the wishes of the ECG entities."), Text.
- ^ "Lex Vest Ltd v. Emanations Communications Group LC".
- ^ "Safemoon Liquidity Pool Compromised: Almost Lost $8.9 million Due To A Public Burn Bug". FX Leaders. 31 March 2023. Retrieved 4 August 2023.
- ^ Toulas, Bill (29 March 2023). "SafeMoon 'burn' bug abused to drain $8.9 million from liquidity pool". BleepingComputer. Retrieved 4 August 2023.
- ^ Quiroz-Gutierrez, Marco (1 November 2023). "SEC says SafeMoon executives withdrew $200 million from crypto project to spend on McLarens and luxury homes". Fortune. Retrieved 2 November 2023 – via AOL.com.
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