Eric Adams is a scam artist

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Former NYC Mayor Eric Adams accused of $2.5 million crypto ‘rug pull’ as his NYC Token crashes


Former NYC Mayor Eric Adams has come under fire after his new cryptocurrencytoken crashed just hours following its launch on Monday. As reported by CoinDesk,Adams’ “NYC Token” hit a $580 million market capitalization at its peak beforeplummeting to around $130 million at this time of writing.Data from the blockchain analysis platform, Bubblemaps, flagged “suspicious”activity surrounding the coin. A wallet linked to the NYC Token’s deployerwithdrew around $2.5 million in liquidity when the token reached its peak. It lateradded around $1.5 million back after the coin dropped by 60 percent, but, as notedby CoinDesk, around $900,000 wasn’t returned.Users across X accuse Adams of a crypto rug pull, a type of scam that occurs whensomeone promotes a new crypto venture, but then suddenly shuts the project down,while making off with the funds they’ve raised.
 

Investors cry foul over former NYC Mayor Eric Adams’s crypto launch: ‘Such an obvious rug’​


On Monday night, hours after announcing his “NYC Token” at a press conference in Times Square, former New York City Mayor Eric Adams launched his cryptocurrency. The purpose of the token was unclear—beyond a vague promise by Adams that it would combat antisemitism—but investors bought it up anyway, briefly sending its market cap to $600 million. Then it crashed.
It didn’t take long for crypto observers to declare NYC Token had all the hallmarks of a dreaded rugpull—a common scam where someone launches a cryptocurrency then quickly extracts the value, leaving retail investors with worthless tokens. According to Nicolas Vaiman, the founder of the crypto analytics firm Bubblemaps, as well as blockchain transactions reviewed by Fortune, the developer likely netted around $1 million in proceeds after withdrawing profits from the market.

Though it remains unclear whether Adams received any of the proceeds, the incident recalled similar debacles of celebrity memecoin launches, including Argentina President Javier Milei’s Libra scandal in early 2025 and Haliey ‘Hawk Tuah girl’ Welch’s failed launch in late 2024. “This is such an obvious rug,” said Vaiman.

After publication, Elissa Buchter from the public relations firm People’s Revolution sent Fortune a statement from NYC Token: “The team has not withdrawn any money from the account,” she wrote. “We are excited to see the response for this Token. It shows many people realize fighting anti-Americanism and antisemitism is important. We’re focused on transparency and building for the long term.”

$NYC Token

When Adams revealed his “NYC Token” project to a gaggle of reporters in Times Square on Monday morning, he was short on specifics. The former mayor declined to clarify who else was involved with the cryptocurrency, and instead pointed to a website without functioning buttons. He added that the project would teach New York’s children about the virtues of blockchain technology and fund initiatives fighting antisemitism.

Adams has long been a crypto booster. He started his mayoral term by declaring he would receive his first three paychecks in Bitcoin and palling around with Brock Pierce, the former Mighty Ducks star who earned his fortune on blockchain projects including the stablecoin Tether.

Eddie Cullen, a former NYC mayoral candidate and founder of the crypto company Crescite, claims that he began sharing ideas with Adams’s inner circle for a NYC token around June 2025. A press release from his political action committee Innovate NY describes plans to support a trademarked initiative called NYC Token that would “channel blockchain technology to drive new city revenue,” and Cullen shared a presentation with Fortune detailing the project that he says he also shared with Adams’s team.

Cullen says that he had no warning about Monday’s announcement and plans to send Adams a cease-and-desist. “I’m going to hold him accountable,” he told Fortune. “I’m more shocked that he would just go out and do this.”

It remains unclear who besides Adams was involved with the token’s launch, with a new website listing C18 Digital as an associated entity. Delaware corporation records indicate that a limited liability company called C18 Digital was incorporated on Dec. 30, 2025.



The muddled history of the token’s origination is just the tip of the iceberg. When a cryptocurrency launches, the developers behind the project will typically fund the new market with other assets such as USDC, a U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin, or the popular cryptocurrency Solana in a so-called “liquidity pool” so that users can both buy and sell the new token.


But the NYC Token did not follow that approach, instead doing a one-sided liquidity pool that only comprised the token itself. When users began to buy it, injecting the liquidity pool with USDC, a wallet associated with the developer withdrew $2.5 million of those USDC. According to Vaiman, this kind of sell-off is more subtle because it doesn’t look like the wallets are selling the token itself. Hayden Davis— the infamous figure behind the Argentina Libra scandal, which saw investors lose $250 million in a memecoin associated with the country’s president—used a similar approach.

After reports of a rugpull went viral on X on Monday night, a new account associated with the token announced that it had added new funds to the liquidity pool. Still, according to Vaiman, the developers likely were able to net around $1 million in profit.

“I truly have no explanation on why they did it,” Vaiman said. “Is this as simple as just pure grift? Maybe I’m overoptimistic and I don’t want to believe that’s the case, but maybe this is what it is.”

Updated on 1/13/2026 at 1:50 PM ET to include a statement from NYC Token.
 
He's just following in the footsteps of his friend:


wired.com


Trumpcoin Launches With a Whimper


Joel Khalili

GettyImages-1300319936.jpg






The Trump family’s new crypto venture, World Liberty Financial, is off to an inauspicious start after website crashes limited the ability for investors to participate in an inaugural token sale event.

The crypto token, WLFI, went on sale at around 9 am Eastern time on Tuesday. At the time of writing, the website continues to be plagued by reliability issues, pushing some visitors to an error page. “We can’t connect to the server for this app or website at this time,” the notice states.

Data from analytics platform Etherscan shows that only 8,500 people have participated in the token presale so far, purchasing around 750 million tokens—3.75 percent of the total available in the presale—between them. A World Liberty Financial representative had previously said on X that 100,000 accredited US investors had been preapproved after registering interest in the token.

World Liberty Financial adviser Sandy Peng told crypto media outlet CoinDesk that the website went down due to a surge in traffic. More than 70 million unique visitors landed on the site within an hour of the token going on sale, she said. The organization did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.

The website issues make it challenging to accurately assess the appetite for the WLFI token among investors. But the rocky launch will give pause to those concerned about the potential for the Trump project to set back the DeFi industry, should it fail.

Since August, World Liberty Financial has been marketed by the Trump family as a way to “revolutionize finance” and “make finance great again.” The website lists presidential candidate Donald Trump as “chief crypto advocate,” and his sons—Eric, Donald Jr., and 18-year-old Barron—as “Web3 ambassadors.”

The World Liberty Financial platform is set to provide peer-to-peer borrowing and lending, in the spirit of what’s known in cryptoland as decentralized finance, or DeFi. But hard details about the project have not been forthcoming. Despite making multiple announcements teasing the project on Telegram and X, and publishing a manifesto of sorts on the project’s aim, the Trumps have supplied barely any information about the workings of the platform or range of services to be available to customers.

This created an opening for bad actors. In late August, impersonators used the project’s Telegram channel—pitched as “the ONLY [sic] place to get the official news”—to advertise an inauthentic token giveaway. In early September, X accounts belonging to Lara Trump, wife to Eric, and Tiffany Trump, daughter of the former president, were allegedly compromised and used by the hackers to peddle another crypto token purportedly related to World Liberty Financial.

In the manifesto published on October 11, which promised to illuminate the Trumps’ “vision for revolutionizing finance” but ultimately shed little light, World Liberty Financial explained that the WLFI token will give people the ability to vote on the future development of the platform. “WLFi is also launching the WLFi governance platform, a DeFi governance platform governance [sic] for $WLFI token holders to help shape the WLFi protocol through governance,” reads one particularly bewildering passage of the post.

“I think all the enthusiasm for the sale has been undone by confusing marketing,” says Nic Carter, a general partner at crypto-focused VC firm Castle Island Ventures. “The details they did release of the protocol are extremely sparse, so it doesn’t surprise me that the market hasn't responded well.”

The fumbled token launch, then, is the latest in a series of mishaps and snafus to befall the World Liberty Financial project. Thanks to its affiliation with the Trump family, any mistakes have the potential to attract magnified attention from press and regulatory bodies, too.

“A bigger concern is investors and regulators perhaps using any failure of the project to justify hostility to the whole crypto ecosystem,” says crypto analyst Noelle Acheson, formerly of crypto brokerage Genesis. “Most developers are working on different types of projects and shouldn’t be deterred,” she says. “But there will be more scorn heaped on crypto.”


 
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