When "It's a Trap" Meme Becomes Reality: The Yang Qichao BFF Case and What Every Trader Must Know

The cryptocurrency world recently faced a chilling reminder of how quickly fortunes can vanish. A post-2000 developer named Yang Qichao launched a meme coin called BFF, which turned out to be exactly what the community warns about—a classic liquidity trap. An investor who put 50,000 USDT in watched their position collapse to just 21.6 USDT within 24 seconds. The 4-year, 6-month sentence that followed sparked fierce debate: Is this criminal fraud or just market risk playing out in real time?

The Anatomy of “It’s a Trap”: How BFF Became a Cautionary Tale

What Actually Happened

The mechanics were textbook predatory: BFF listed with liquidity added, investors rushed in, and within seconds the developer drained the entire pool. Price crashed to near-zero. The investor’s 50,000 USDT gamble returned only 21.6 USDT—a 99.96% loss that felt less like trading and more like theft.

The Legal Battlefield

Here’s where it gets controversial. The first instance court ruled it fraud. But the defense in the second hearing (concluded May 20, 2024) argued something that split the entire community: “The contract was legitimate. All on-chain records are verifiable. Participants knew the risks. Where’s the crime?” This single argument exposed the razor-thin line between legal “rug pull” and criminal fraud.

Three Uncomfortable Truths Every Trader Needs to Internalize

1. Platform permissions don’t equal legal protection

Just because a smart contract allows liquidity withdrawal doesn’t mean you can drain it with malicious intent. Criminal law doesn’t care about code features—it cares about intent. If you design a system to trap users knowingly, prosecutors will argue fraud regardless of technical legitimacy.

2. Transparency can be a weapon, not a shield

This one stings: even though the BFF contract was fully auditable on-chain, even though every transaction was recorded forever, even though it was all “verifiable”—none of that stopped the conviction. Courts looked at why the developer acted, not whether the records existed. On-chain doesn’t mean above-the-law.

3. “High-risk players” still have legal protection

The argument that experienced traders “knew what they signed up for” carries zero weight in criminal courts. You can’t exploit someone just because they were reckless. It’s a trap, and “it’s a trap meme” becomes dead serious when prosecutors get involved.

How to Spot Projects Before They Become Traps

Before you invest, ask yourself these questions:

Red Flags in Liquidity Management

  • Liquidity is unlocked or has no time-lock mechanism
  • Developers can withdraw funds immediately after launch
  • No transparency on LP token holding or burn status

Red Flags in Contract Control

  • Developers retain mint privileges after launch
  • Transaction tax functions can be adjusted by admins
  • Contract ownership hasn’t been renounced or transferred to governance

Red Flags in Identity

  • Project name mimics famous protocols but code belongs to unknown teams
  • Contract addresses don’t match the official website
  • Multiple “official” addresses claiming legitimacy

Red Flags in Activity

  • Trading volume concentrated at launch, then dies off
  • K-line movements synchronized with social media pumps
  • Team rarely addresses technical questions, only promotes

Red Flags in Hype

  • Marketing spend wildly exceeds development outputs
  • No audits, no meaningful whitepapers, no real team doxxing
  • Promises of moon-bound returns with vague mechanics

Damage Control: If You’ve Already Been Trapped

Immediate Actions

  1. Collect everything: transaction hashes, block explorer screenshots, timestamps, Discord/Telegram chat records, contract code snapshots from multiple dates, contract creator addresses
  2. Document the timeline: when you bought, when price crashed, when you discovered the trap
  3. Take screenshots of multiple nodes—don’t rely on memory or single sources

Legal Channels

  • File reports with local law enforcement (especially if you’re in a jurisdiction with crypto-aware prosecutors)
  • File complaints with the exchange or DEX where you traded
  • Use official government channels for financial crime reporting
  • Engage a lawyer familiar with crypto fraud cases
  • Avoid joining random “victims groups”—they’re often operated by scammers seeking more prey

What Actually Works

  • Unit with other victims through formal legal channels only
  • Cooperate fully with investigators if contacted
  • Never try to “hack back” or take vigilante action
  • Be transparent about how you acquired funds (to avoid hindering the case)

The Uncomfortable Reality Going Forward

The Yang Qichao case marks a turning point. Regulators and courts are now treating meme coin exploits as serious fraud. The era of “it’s all on-chain, so it’s legal” is over. Whether you’re building or trading:

  • Developers: If you add liquidity with plans to drain it, you’re not running a market experiment—you’re executing a premeditated theft that courts will prosecute as such.
  • Traders: If you spot “it’s a trap” mechanics, don’t convince yourself the team is trustworthy. Exit before the trap snaps shut.

The sickle always falls eventually. The only question is whether you’ll be holding it or caught beneath it.


References: ETH, SOL, XRP continue trading amid evolving regulatory frameworks

ETH0,58%
SOL1,85%
XRP1,13%
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