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Just caught up with a pretty jaw-dropping case that really shows how far some people will go in crypto. Braden John Karony, the CEO of Safemoon, got hit with guilty verdicts on all three federal charges for straight-up embezzling millions from the liquidity pool. We're talking serious money here – the guy allegedly pocketed over $9 million while claiming the pool was locked and untouchable to investors.
The thing that gets me is how brazen this whole thing was. Safemoon's market cap hit over $8 billion at its peak, and Braden John Karony and his crew were basically running a sophisticated scheme right under everyone's noses. They'd publicly swear up and down that the liquidity was locked and safe, meanwhile they're quietly draining it to fund a lifestyle most of us can only dream about – we're talking a $2.2 million Utah property, multiple other real estate holdings, and a collection of luxury cars including Audi R8s and custom trucks.
The Brooklyn federal jury didn't take long to see through it. What really stood out during the trial was how deliberate the fraud was – they even laundered money through fake trading accounts and private wallets to cover their tracks. The DOJ made it clear that Braden John Karony faces up to 45 years in prison, and the courts already ordered him to forfeit around $2 million in property assets.
What's wild is that Safemoon itself filed for bankruptcy back in December 2023 after the SEC came down hard on them for securities violations. The whole "locked liquidity" narrative was basically marketing fiction. One of the prosecutors put it perfectly – Safemoon turned out to be anything but "safe" for the people who actually invested in it.
This case also involved accomplices like Thomas Smith who already pleaded guilty, and there's still someone named Kyle Nagy who's apparently still out there. It's honestly a reminder of why due diligence matters so much in this space. Sentencing is coming up soon for Braden John Karony, and I'd expect the judge to make an example here given how calculated everything was.