Trigger warning: suicide
Remember the Twitter account @adyingnobody who promised to leak a massive 137-gigabyte worth of Telegram chats around alleged malicious activities involving crypto personalities?
Well, on the eve of their supposed first wave of leaks, they made a self-transfer of Ethereum with an eerie farewell note announcing that the leak was a hoax.
Tracked based on the wallet ID they published when they first announced the supposed plan to leak, the account transferred US$100 worth of ether but it seems the intent was to leave a message. The input data starts with an announcement that “there is no release [of the leak] tomorrow [and] this is all a hoax.”
“These are all fabrications made by myself for attention,” the message continued. “I will be dead from suicide, you have nothing to worry about so do not bother finding me.”
On June 7, the Twitter account posted the plan to release the Telegram leaks. Set in three phases starting on June 15, the messages were supposed to implicate crypto influencers and project creators in fraudulent and unethical behavior.
Three days after, the Twitter account was suspended.

The hacker said they were able to do this through a “vulnerability” on the chat platform, allowing one to “recreate an invite to view the overview page and recent messages of any Telegram group of an individual user without actually joining said group.”
Telegram immediately tweeted to address the issue, saying “no such vulnerability has ever been found.”
An anonymous account made a baseless claim that they were able to access the contents of private group chats on Telegram. No such vulnerability has ever been found. This is likely a hoax with the intent to get users to download malware.
— Telegram Messenger (@telegram) June 7, 2022
This development has stirred mixed reactions from the cryptosphere on Twitter, with some confirming their predictions that the stunt was a hoax. Others tried to read between the lines and floated the conspiracy that the supposed whistleblower might have been threatened to release the latest message and hold the leaks.
Ten days ago, @adyingnobody published a memo promissing to expose private conversations of VIPs about fraud, etc. It turns out this was a spam action as it got quickly viral.
— Dimitris Savvopoulos (@dimsav) June 16, 2022
Lesson: If someone promises exposing a scam, it's probably a scam. Real whisleblowers do not promise.
#aDyingNobody was eliminated and replaced. This is the false narrative… pic.twitter.com/p26GfsB0rd
— Anonwhistleblower (@whistleblowr233) June 15, 2022
So that @adyingnobody fella who accused unnamed but big figures in the crypto industry of insider trading, pedophilia, and soliciting assassination services sent a transaction to himself with a schizo message in the input data, clearly meant to appear as if they were blackmailed. pic.twitter.com/F7AwlWqlQx
— Hill Belichick 🐒 (@PIHillBelichick) June 15, 2022
Information for this briefing was found via Twitter. The author has no securities or affiliations related to this organization. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.