---
title: "South Korea Arrests CATFI Team in First Solana Rug Pull Case"
date: 2026-05-27
author: "Kelvin Scott"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/south-korea-arrests-catfi-rug-pull-scheme-suspects.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# South Korea Arrests CATFI Team in First Solana Rug Pull Case

South Korean prosecutors have arrested and charged several people behind the Solana-based meme coin CATFI in what authorities describe as the country’s first criminal prosecution tied to a decentralized exchange rug pull scheme.

## Key Takeaways

- South Korea charged five people linked to the Solana meme coin CATFI.
- The case marks the country’s first prosecution involving a decentralized exchange rug pull.
- Authorities claim the suspects used fake promotions, wash trading, and multiple wallets to manipulate the market.
- Investors reportedly lost nearly 900 million won while suspects earned around 400 million won in profits.

## What Happened?

South Korean prosecutors announced charges against multiple individuals accused of operating a fraudulent Solana meme coin project called CATFI. According to the **Seoul Southern District Prosecutors’ Office**, the suspects allegedly promoted the token through fake social media activity before abandoning the project after investors poured money into it.

Authorities said the case is the first prosecution under [South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act](https://coinlaw.io/korea-crypto-influencer-asset-disclosure-law/) involving a decentralized exchange, or DEX, based rug pull scheme.

> South Korea Makes First Arrest and Prosecution in DEX Rug Pull Case   
>   
> According to Digital Asset, South Korean prosecutors charged a criminal group accused of manipulating the price of the Solana-based meme coin CATFI and generating KRW 400 million (~ $260,000) in illegal… [pic.twitter.com/F2TuKHyxN2](https://t.co/F2TuKHyxN2)
> 
> — Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) [May 27, 2026](https://twitter.com/WuBlockchain/status/2059522884700381471?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## South Korea Expands Crypto Enforcement to DEX Markets

The investigation focused on **CATFI**, a [meme coin](https://coinlaw.io/memecoin-statistics/) launched on Solana token platform Pump.fun in early 2025. Prosecutors claim the group listed the token on a decentralized exchange and aggressively promoted it online to attract retail investors during the growing meme coin frenzy.

Officials arrested two key suspects and charged three additional individuals without detention. Authorities also charged two accomplices accused of helping the main suspect avoid investigators during the probe.

According to prosecutors, the main suspect operated under the social media alias “**Eth Father**” and posed as an independent crypto influencer. Investigators allege the account promoted **CATFI** while secretly working with the token’s creators.

The prosecution stated that the group artificially boosted social media follower counts and posted misleading announcements, including f**alse token lockup claims**, to create market excitement around the project.

## Prosecutors Detail Alleged Market Manipulation

Investigators said the CATFI team used several crypto wallets and circular trading activity to hide their control over the token supply. Authorities described the trades as wash trading designed to create a false appearance of market demand.

The token reportedly surged by nearly **1,001 times within just 26 hours of launch**. Around 6,000 investors bought the token during the rapid rally.

However, prosecutors claim the operators later dumped their holdings, triggering a collapse in the token’s value. Authorities estimate that 256 investors suffered combined losses of around 900 million won, or roughly **$650,000**.

Meanwhile, the suspects allegedly earned approximately 400 million won in illegal profits from the scheme after launching the project with only about 10 million won in initial capital.

## First Major Test for South Korea’s Crypto Law

The **CATFI prosecution** represents a major test for South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act, which took effect in July 2024. While previous enforcement actions focused mainly on centralized exchanges, this case expands regulatory scrutiny to decentralized trading platforms and meme coin projects.

In an official statement, prosecutors said:

“

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.

South Korean Prosecutors





Authorities also highlighted that [decentralized exchanges](https://coinlaw.io/decentralized-exchanges-dex-statistics/) had remained a regulatory blind spot for crypto related crimes until now.

The Financial Services Commission reportedly referred the case to prosecutors after online investigators identified wallet addresses connected to the suspects. Prosecutors said one suspect remained on the run for nearly three months while using disguises to avoid capture.

The Virtual Asset Crime Joint Investigation Unit worked alongside tax and financial authorities to track down the individuals involved.

## Growing Pressure on Meme Coin Fraud

The CATFI case arrives as regulators worldwide increase scrutiny on meme coin scams and market manipulation in the crypto sector. Solana based meme coins, especially those launched through platforms like Pump.fun, have seen explosive popularity over the past year, but the sector has also faced repeated allegations of insider dumping and [coordinated rug pull schemes](https://coinlaw.io/rug-pulls-amp-ponzi-schemes-in-crypto-statistics/).

South Korean prosecutors said they plan to continue pursuing crypto related fraud aggressively, particularly schemes targeting retail traders through social media manipulation and decentralized platforms.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

In my experience, this case could become a turning point for crypto enforcement in Asia. For years, scammers used decentralized exchanges and meme coin hype as a shield against regulators, believing authorities could not track or prosecute them effectively. I found it notable that South Korea specifically targeted fake influencer marketing and wash trading tactics, which are becoming increasingly common in meme coin markets.

The CATFI case also sends a strong warning that decentralized platforms are no longer outside regulatory reach. As governments sharpen their crypto enforcement strategies, projects relying on fake hype and manipulated trading activity may face much tougher consequences moving forward.

Definition of Blockchain. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Blockchain**A distributed digital ledger that records transactions across a network, with each block cryptographically linked to the previous one for security.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/blockchain/)