Key Highlights
A viral X post accuses CZ of fueling sharp memecoin crashes without regulatory action.
There is no evidence of investigations or formal complaints tied to the claims so far.
The episode highlights ongoing tension between social media narratives and market reality.
Changpeng Zhao (CZ), the founder and former CEO of Binance, is once again at the center of a heated crypto debate, this time driven by viral social media accusations rather than regulators or courts.
In an X post on Saturday, user NoLimitGains accused CZ of orchestrating a series of “pump-and-dump” schemes tied to small, illiquid tokens that later collapsed sharply. The claims, which quickly gained traction, pointed to several memecoins that reportedly lost between 80% and 98% of their value shortly after being listed on Binance Alpha or related platforms.
The post laid out a familiar accusation: big early buys, a listing catalyst, a fast price surge, and then a sharp sell-off. Beyond screenshots and price charts, no concrete evidence was presented. Binance and CZ have not responded publicly, leaving the claims circulating without verification.
Context matters: volatility, not verdicts
The allegations land in a memecoin market already defined by thin liquidity and sharp, exaggerated swings. According to CoinGecko data, the memecoin market cap rose 10.5% to $48.3 billion and reached a trading volume of $7.3 billion, both in the last 24 hours.
Market participants note that sharp collapses are common in this segment, particularly after speculative rallies fade. Importantly, there is no indication from regulators or law enforcement that CZ is under investigation related to these claims. As of now, the accusations remain online commentary rather than legal findings.
CZ has largely stepped back from day-to-day exchange operations since his 2024 legal settlement in the United States, where he pleaded guilty to violations related to anti-money laundering controls at Binance.
A brief look back at CZ’s legal history
In 2024, CZ served a four-month sentence in the U.S. after pleading guilty to lapses in Binance’s AML controls. The court stated there was no evidence that he knowingly enabled criminal activity, and his cooperation weighed heavily in limiting the sentence.
He was released in October and quickly signaled a pivot away from exchange operations toward long-term bets in blockchain infrastructure, AI, and biotech.
Market influence without formal power
Even without an executive title, CZ still has gravity. A whisper of a Binance listing, an Alpha tag, or a loose ecosystem tie is often enough to spark a rush into thinly traded tokens.
That influence is a double-edged sword. When prices rise, no one complains. When they crater, fingers point fast, especially in a market still allergic to credibility gaps after years of blowups.
What this episode really highlights is crypto’s old fault line: oversized figures, fragile liquidity, and a social media court that hands down judgments long before evidence shows up. Whether the noise dies down or turns into something bigger won’t hinge on tweets, but on whether regulators or investigators decide to step in.
Also read: Kyrgyzstan Launches First Nation-Backed Stablecoin KGST on Binance







