Crypto detective ZachXBT has been waving his digital metaphorical flag, demanding tougher punishments for those sneaky SIM swapping and social engineering fraudsters. Because apparently, stealing millions isn’t enough—let’s bring in the hangman? 😂
He spotlighted a Canadian teen—yes, a literal teen—who managed to pilfer a staggering $37 million in crypto. The plot thickened after someone cheekily suggested that “wallet draining should be the death penalty.” Because nothing screams justice like metaphorical decapitation over digital wallets, right? 💀
Our hero Zach responded with a rant about the legal loopholes, especially when it comes to young offenders. Apparently, the law likes to give these digital bank robbers a free pass—because they’re adorable juveniles? Or just because the law is more relaxed than a Sunday brunch? 🤷♂️
ZachXBT Shares the $37M Canadian Case
He specifically called out Cameron Redman—who, at the tender age of 17, orchestrated a colossal SIM swap attack back in 2020. Yep, that’s right—teenage troublemaker with a computer. He targeted a victim and walked away with about 60,000 Bitcoin Cash (BCH—sounds like a superhero’s sidekick) and 1,547 Bitcoin (BTC—because who doesn’t want a dozen of those?). The total? A cool $37 million at the time. 💸
“Cameron Redman helped SIM swap $37M in 2020 when he was 17 from Canada. Not a single mention of his full name or photo on the internet until I posted it after he got involved with phishing / X ATOs. Zero reason his name should’ve been protected or hidden,”
— ZachXBT (@zachxbt) June 1, 2025
ZachXBT dug into the muddy waters of his research and revealed that the February 22, 2020 attack against poor Josh Jones involved a labyrinth of money laundering tricks. The stolen Bitcoin Cash was shuffled through hundreds of tiny transactions—because why not complicate things?—and most of the Bitcoin was funneled through fancy mixing services like Chip Mixer and Crypto Mixer, making it almost as hard to trace as your grandma’s secret recipe.
He’s not exactly thrilled with how the legal system treats minors caught with a digital gillion. Canada and the EU, according to him, have laws that are more relaxed than his grandma’s Sunday afternoon cardigan. Basically, these bright young criminals are getting away with *a lot*, because the rules are more bendy than a yogi in a yoga class. 🧘♂️
The man behind the camera, Zach, is pretty irked about the whole name suppression thing for juvenile scammers. He openly states he posts full names—even if the suspect is an under-18 crop-top enthusiast—because “when it comes to crypto crimes, name shielding is just a fancy way to turn a blind eye.”
Fast forward: Hamilton Police in Ontario made sure Cameron Redman faced the music in November 2021, working hand-in-glove with the FBI and U.S. Secret Service. They managed to claw back $5.4 million in crypto—impressive, right?—but a hefty $31.5 million still appears to be doing the digital disappearing act. Poof! 💨
Meanwhile, the case keeps popping up because Redman, it seems, isn’t tired of the crypto game. ZachXBT recently tracked him back to new phishing shenanigans and NFT project hijinks. Given the financial scale? Zach’s point is clear: there’s “zero reason his name should’ve been hidden”—a sentiment as obvious as a neon sign.
Read More
- 50 Goal Sound ID Codes for Blue Lock Rivals
- Quarantine Zone: The Last Check Beginner’s Guide
- 50 Ankle Break & Score Sound ID Codes for Basketball Zero
- Ultimate Myth Idle RPG Tier List & Reroll Guide
- Lucky Offense Tier List & Reroll Guide
- Mirren Star Legends Tier List [Global Release] (May 2025)
- Every House Available In Tainted Grail: The Fall Of Avalon
- How to use a Modifier in Wuthering Waves
- Basketball Zero Boombox & Music ID Codes – Roblox
- Enshrouded Hemotoxin Crisis: How to Disable the Curse and Save Your Sanity!
2025-06-01 18:35