The developer of a Mutant Ape Yacht Club knock-off collection has allegedly “defrauded” investors of $2.9 million and admitted to a rug pull.
The developer of a Mutant Ape Yacht Club knock-off collection — Mutant Ape Planet — has been arrested in New York, charged with allegedly “defrauding” investors of $2.9 million in a "rug pull scheme."
The arrest took place on Jan. 4 at the John F. International Airport in New York, with homeland security agent Ivan J. Arvelo alleging that French national “Aurelien Michel perpetrated a rug pull scheme” and stole “nearly $3 million from investors for his own personal use," stating:
“Purchasers of Mutant Ape Planet NFTs thought they were investing in a trendy new collectible, but they were deceived and received none of the promised benefits”
Internal Revenue Service agent Thomas Fattorusso was also cited in a press release from the Department of Justice, alleging that “Michel defrauded investors by making false representations of, amongst other things, giveaways, tokens with staking features, and merchandise collections,” before withdrawing the funds once the NFTs were sold out.
According to the statement, Michel is understood to have admitted to the community via a social media chat that he had perpetrated a rug pull, saying “we never intended to rug but the community went way too toxic.”
The collection — a knock-off of the popular Mutant Ape Yacht Club NFT collection — consists of 6,797 NFTs stored on the Ethereum blockchain with 567 Ether (ETH) worth of sales but has seen its average price and sales volume crater since it launched in Jan. 2022.
Following the arrest, holders of the collection have been sharing their side of the story via Twitter, noting that James had attempted to blame his departure on the community who were becoming skeptical due to the lack of activity.
When I’m reality what was happening was the founders were actually not holding to their promised utility leading in to people losing trust and then one day the founders completely disappeared with no notes, nothing. Things went sideways here as lots of people left the community-
— PerfectElectro (@electro_perfect) January 5, 2023
The project has since been taken over by the community who is attempting to breathe some life back into it, spearheaded by a user with the pseudonym HTMadge.
According to a Dec. 21 DappRadar report, Rug pulls — a type of exit scam where the creators of a project suddenly withdraw liquidity from the platform —were the most common type of attack throughout 2022, accounting for 119 incidents and $200 million in stolen funds.
Related: Magic Eden to refund users after fake NFTs sold due to exploit
Popular influencer and former adult film star Lana Rhoades was accused of being behind one of the bigger rug pulls of 2022, after reportedly walking away with $1.5 million from sales of an NFT project which has seen less than 1 ETH worth of sales since its Feb. 2022 launch.
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