When facing depositions from major creditors, a bankrupt startup in the Web3 space chose to invoke the Fifth Amendment rather than cooperate. The move came amid an ongoing federal criminal investigation into the company's operations. It's a stark reminder of the legal minefields that can await even well-funded ventures—especially in industries where regulatory scrutiny runs high. The silence strategy raises questions: What's serious enough to warrant such defensive tactics? Is it operational misconduct, financial mismanagement, or something deeper? For investors tracking this space, it underscores why due diligence on management credibility matters just as much as the technology itself.
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YieldChaser
· 01-05 15:44
Silence is a confession. This tactic is seen too often in Web3.
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SnapshotBot
· 01-04 13:05
Silence is the biggest confession; I've seen this trick too many times.
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MEVHunter_9000
· 01-04 10:16
I've seen this trick many times before; silence is basically a confession that there's a ghost involved.
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FallingLeaf
· 01-03 09:18
Silence equals guilt; I've seen this trick many times in the crypto world.
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CounterIndicator
· 01-02 17:59
Silence is the best answer; this matter is basically confirmed.
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OptionWhisperer
· 01-02 17:56
Silence is a confession; this trick is really nothing new in Web3.
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SingleForYears
· 01-02 17:51
Silence is the answer, this move directly exposed it
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MissedTheBoat
· 01-02 17:38
Silence is a confession; I've seen this tactic too many times in the blockchain community.
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ChainDetective
· 01-02 17:36
Silent and speechless... with this move, it's basically a dead giveaway.
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JustHodlIt
· 01-02 17:31
Silence itself is the biggest acknowledgment; this move is truly outstanding.
When facing depositions from major creditors, a bankrupt startup in the Web3 space chose to invoke the Fifth Amendment rather than cooperate. The move came amid an ongoing federal criminal investigation into the company's operations. It's a stark reminder of the legal minefields that can await even well-funded ventures—especially in industries where regulatory scrutiny runs high. The silence strategy raises questions: What's serious enough to warrant such defensive tactics? Is it operational misconduct, financial mismanagement, or something deeper? For investors tracking this space, it underscores why due diligence on management credibility matters just as much as the technology itself.