Crypto Beast Exposed As The $190 Million $ALT Pump-and-Dump Unravels
4 min read
In one of the most shocking revelations of 2025, an online promoter known as Crypto Beast has been exposed for orchestrating a massive $190 million pump-and-dump scheme centered around the altcoin $ALT. At first glance, it seemed like another promising project. Crypto Beast hyped $ALT across social platforms, describing it as “the next big gem.” He dropped chart-heavy threads on X (formerly Twitter), blasted Telegram channels, and promised followers life-changing 100x returns. His posts built hype quickly. Traders rushed in, eager not to miss out. Then, it all came crashing down. $ALT From Moon to Meltdown On July 14, 2025, $ALT’s price plummeted heavily. What was once trading at $0.19 fell sharply to just $0.003—a drop that sent shockwaves through the community. According to CoinMarketCap data, the token’s market cap sank from $190 million to $3 million in hours. Panic set in. The FOMO that had fueled the run-up turned into anger and confusion. Thousands of retail traders were left holding the bag. People started asking “Who did this?” ZachXBT, Onchain Truth Hunter Renowned blockchain investigator ZachXBT took on the case. Known for his forensic-level tracking of crypto scams, Zach began tracing $ALT’s onchain activity. What he uncovered was staggering. He identified over 45 insider wallets that had dumped more than $11 million worth of $ALT right before the crash. Each wallet’s transactions were carefully documented and timestamped, revealing a well-orchestrated exit. 1/ An investigation into how @cryptobeastreal scammed followers by lying they were not behind the $190M -> $3M $ALT market cap crash where 45+ connected insider wallets sold $11M+ on July 14, 2025. pic.twitter.com/AmnY1xux7a — ZachXBT (@zachxbt) July 22, 2025 And all signs pointed back to one man: Crypto Beast. One address stood out early in the investigation: Ledzo5cdS1RYfX4h391fYC8TF6xkwAC8U77F2pCaH4L This wallet had been publicly shared by Crypto Beast in previous posts. Zach followed the breadcrumbs. He noticed small deposits being routed through multiple instant exchanges—including KuCoin nested, Sideshift, Binance nested, and HTX. These deposits ended up in dozens of side wallets. All of those wallets dumped $ALT at its peak. And they were all connected to one funding source: a Celestia node address. celestia1chflqywwp0k8rjzgp3w4447fquyk9ynnc6zws5 This node turned out to be the hub. Between May and July 2025, it funded every insider wallet that participated in the dump. The blockchain didn’t just tell a story—it lit up a clear, undeniable connection between Crypto Beast and the wallets that drained the market. Crypto Beast Delete and Disappear Once the crash became public, Crypto Beast did what scammers often do: he vanished. He deleted all of his promotional posts. He removed “buy now” tweets and Telegram messages. He deactivated his X account. He even claimed he had been hacked, hoping to deflect blame. But the blockchain doesn’t forget. It showed a clear pattern. The same Celestia node funded every wallet involved in the dump. The digital evidence was impossible to ignore. Still Holding the Bag… and the Tokens Despite offloading millions, the story doesn’t end there. Wallets linked to Crypto Beast still hold over 89 million $ALT tokens—roughly 10% of the total supply. That’s a massive stash, capable of crashing the market again if dumped. For many seasoned traders, this wasn’t surprising. Crypto Beast has run the same playbook before—on tokens like $ALPHA, $RICH, $YE, $RUG, $ACE, and $JOHN. The cycle is always the same: Create hype. Pump the token. Dump on retail traders. Delete everything. Reappear with a new handle and a new “gem.” Is Another $ALT 2.0 Coming Soon? Don’t be surprised if Crypto Beast returns under a new name, pushing a fresh low-cap token with phrases like “stealth launch,” “whale entry,” or “undervalued gem.” He’ll build FOMO again. He’ll hype new charts. He’ll repeat the cycle. And when the token peaks, he’ll dump, delete, and disappear—again. What Can We Learn? ZachXBT’s investigation is a reminder that blockchains may be public, but interpreting them takes real skill. His work connected wallets, nodes, and exchanges into a single story—one that proved this pump-and-dump scheme wasn’t accidental. It was coordinated. It was strategic. And it was entirely avoidable with proper caution. If you’re trading altcoins, here’s the takeaway: Trust the data, not the hype. Follow transaction flows over social threads. Be skeptical when things look too good to be true. Because in the crypto space, the next Crypto Beast is always waiting. Disclosure: This is not trading or investment advice. Always do your research before buying any cryptocurrency or investing in any services. Follow us on Twitter @nulltxnews to stay updated with the latest Crypto, NFT, AI, Cybersecurity, Distributed Computing, and Metaverse news ! Image(s): Shutterstock.com

Source: NullTx