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Been thinking about the whole memecoin situation lately, especially after watching what went down with LIBRA. That absolute collapse was wild - token tanked over 90% within a day, wiped out $4 billion in market cap. Investors were understandably furious, pointing fingers at Kelsier Ventures for what looked like classic insider trading and manipulation. The team literally pocketed $100 million from the launch, which obviously didn't help their case.
Here's where it gets interesting though. There's actually a legal angle most people aren't considering. According to analysis from folks in the industry, whether rug pulling is actually illegal depends heavily on how regulators classify these tokens. If memecoins get treated as commodities rather than securities, the whole insider trading playbook changes. Investors lose that particular legal weapon.
So is rug pulling illegal in that scenario? Not necessarily through that specific lens. Instead, you'd need to prove market manipulation, outright fraud, or both. And that's a much higher bar to clear. You basically have to demonstrate that someone deliberately rigged prices or spread false information to move markets. Just having an unfair information advantage? That apparently isn't enough on its own.
The LIBRA situation is a perfect case study here. Kelsier's actions might fall into that gray zone where something feels deeply wrong - and honestly, morally it probably is - but whether it's legally actionable is another question entirely. Even Argentina's President Milei, who initially hyped the token before backing away, is now facing fraud accusations and impeachment threats. Shows how messy this all gets.
What struck me most was the observation that illegal doesn't always mean immoral, and immoral doesn't always mean illegal. But stupidity? That part's always legal. The real question is whether courts will eventually draw clearer lines around what constitutes actual market manipulation in the memecoin space, or if this stays in regulatory limbo for a while longer.