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South Korea arrests criminal group in first DEX rug pull case

By Editorial Team · Published May 27, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
DeFiRegulationAltcoinsSecurity
South Korea arrests criminal group in first DEX rug pull case

South Korea arrests criminal group in first DEX rug pull case

Authorities prosecuted a group behind the Solana-based CATFI token manipulation, marking the country's first enforcement action against decentralized exchange fraud.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 27, 2026

South Korean law enforcement has arrested and prosecuted members of a criminal organization behind what is being described as the country’s first rug pull case on a decentralized exchange. The scheme involved a Solana-based token called CATFI, where the group allegedly manipulated the token’s price to attract buyers before draining liquidity and leaving investors with worthless holdings.

What happened with CATFI

A group created the CATFI token, artificially inflated its price to draw in retail buyers, then pulled the rug by draining the liquidity pool. Investors are left holding tokens that are effectively worthless, and the perpetrators walk away with the proceeds. The exact details surrounding the individuals involved, including their identities, any associated criminal charges, the specific date of arrests, and the total financial losses incurred remain undisclosed.

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The Solana blockchain has become a particularly fertile ground for these schemes. Its low transaction costs and high throughput make it trivially easy to launch new tokens and provision liquidity. That same infrastructure that makes Solana attractive for legitimate developers also makes it a playground for bad actors who can spin up and tear down projects with minimal overhead.

Why DEX enforcement matters

South Korea has been one of the more aggressive countries globally when it comes to crypto regulation. The country implemented strict rules around centralized exchanges, requiring real-name verification and partnerships with local banks. It cracked down on anonymous trading accounts. But those enforcement actions targeted centralized chokepoints. DEX-based fraud is a different animal entirely, because the transactions happen peer-to-peer on a public blockchain with pseudonymous participants.

The fact that South Korean authorities were able to identify, arrest, and prosecute the individuals behind the CATFI scheme suggests either the perpetrators made operational security mistakes, or law enforcement has developed more sophisticated blockchain forensics capabilities than previously demonstrated.

What this means for investors

For retail investors, especially those trading low-cap tokens on Solana and other chains, this case is a double-edged development. On one hand, more aggressive enforcement could deter some fraction of would-be scammers. On the other, the vast majority of rug pulls still go unpunished globally, and one high-profile case shouldn’t create a false sense of security.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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