South Korea Charges Five in First Ever DEX Rug Pull Case 

South Korea just set a legal precedent that every meme coin launcher needs to read carefully. On May 27, 2026, the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors’ Office charged five suspects behind the CATFI rug pull. This marks the first ever prosecution of a DEX-based crypto fraud under the 2024 Virtual Asset User Protection Act. 

Two main suspects were arrested and indicted. One additional suspect was indicted without detention. Two others were charged for helping the ringleader evade capture for three months. South Korea news today delivers a clear message to the meme coin ecosystem. The regulatory blind spot on decentralized platforms just closed.

How the CATFI Scheme Actually Worked

The group launched CATFI on Pump.fun on Solana in early 2025. From the start, the operation was built on deception at every layer.

  • The ringleader, surnamed Park, impersonated a well-known crypto influencer called “Eth Father” to build false credibility.
  • A second key suspect managed CATFI’s official channels, artificially inflating follower counts and posting fake lock-up announcements.
  • Multiple wallets conducted wash trading to simulate organic buying activity and conceal the team’s control over supply.
  • False positive announcements generated FOMO among retail participants

The manipulation worked. CATFI pumped 1,001-fold in just 26 hours. Approximately 6,000 investors bought in. When the team pulled liquidity, 256 investors were left with combined losses of 900 million KRW (around $650,000). The suspects had invested only a few million KRW and walked away with roughly 400 million KRW ($260,000-$290,000) in illegal profits.

The prosecutors were explicit about the significance. “This marks the first time that the Virtual Asset User Protection Act has been applied to penalize a rug pull scheme under fraudulent and unfair trading regulations,” the translated release stated. “It’s also the first legal prosecution of a crypto crime executed through a DEX, which has been in a regulatory blind spot.”

Previously, South Korea’s virtual asset enforcement focused exclusively on centralized exchanges. Decentralized platforms operated outside that framework entirely. It created a legal environment where rug pull perpetrators could claim they were simply launching tokens on public infrastructure. That argument no longer holds in South Korea.

Blockchain Analysis Cracked the Case

The investigation itself demonstrates how crypto enforcement is maturing. Online investigators had previously identified the suspects and their wallet addresses, reporting them to authorities. Police initially closed the case after the suspects claimed that hackers targeted them. The Financial Services Commission later referred the case to prosecutors. The Virtual Asset Crime Joint Investigation Unit then worked with financial and tax authorities to trace the on-chain trail. That ultimately led to tracking down a suspect who had spent three months in disguise to avoid arrest. Arrests came on May 11. Formal charges followed on May 27.

What This Means for the Meme Coin Ecosystem

For investors, South Korea’s enforcement action signals that on-chain evidence is increasingly sufficient for criminal prosecution, even in decentralized environments. This means wash trading patterns, wallet clustering, and coordinated sell-offs are now forensically traceable and legally actionable. Furthermore, for developers and token launchers, the precedent is unambiguous. Pump.fun news in the context of this case extends far beyond Korea, as other jurisdictions watching this outcome may accelerate similar DEX-focused enforcement frameworks.

Consequently, for the broader crypto market, closing the DEX regulatory blind spot removes one of the most frequently exploited gaps in retail investor protection. As a result, meme coin launches that rely on manufactured hype and coordinated exit liquidity now carry genuine legal exposure, not just reputational risk.

The prosecutors closed their statement with a warning that carries weight beyond this single case. “The prosecution remains committed to instilling a firm realization among those seeking overnight wealth through illicit methods that market manipulation will inevitably lead to total financial and personal ruin.”

The post South Korea Charges Five in First Ever DEX Rug Pull Case  appeared first on Coinfomania.

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