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#RoaringKittyAccountHacked
The reported hack of Keith Gill’s (Roaring Kitty) X account on May 11, 2026, serves as a textbook example of the "pump and dump" schemes currently targeting high-profile social media profiles.
The Timeline of the Hack
After roughly 16 months of relative silence, the verified The Roaring Kitty account suddenly posted at approximately 21:13 GMT on May 11.
The Content: The posts included a contract address for a Solana-based meme coin called Red Kitten Crew (RKC) via the Pump fun platform, accompanied by a cartoon clip and the text "red bandit crew 4 life."
The Market Reaction: Within minutes, the RKC token’s market capitalization surged to nearly $12 million.
The Crash: As soon as the suspicious tweets were deleted—presumably after Gill regained control—the market cap plummeted back to approximately $1.8 million, leaving late-entry investors with massive losses.
Why the Community Identified it as a Hack
Investors and analysts flagged the activity as fraudulent almost immediately based on several "red flags":
Platform Shift: Keith Gill has historically focused on GameStop (GME) and traditional equity options. He has no public history of promoting Solana meme coins or using Pump fun.
Style Deviation: The cryptic but highly produced video memes Gill is known for were replaced by a low-effort contract address and a short, generic cartoon clip.
The "Ticker Confusion": Interestingly, the hack caused a secondary "collateral" pump. An older, unrelated token on the BNB Chain also called RockyCat (RKC) spiked 25% due to ticker confusion before traders realized it had no connection to the events.
The Broader Context
This event mirrors a rising trend of "celebrity meme coin" hijacks. High-profile accounts, including those of Kylian Mbappé and Michael Saylor, have been compromised in similar ways to launch "flash-in-the-pan" tokens.
Warning: Analysts note that over 98% of tokens launched on Pump.fun carry characteristics of wash-trading or scams. In this case, reports suggest the hackers may have extracted over $500,000 in profit from the 20-minute window of chaos.
As of now, Keith Gill has not released a formal statement regarding the breach, but the deletion of the posts and the return to silence suggest the threat has been neutralized. Proceeding with extreme caution is advised; in the current landscape, a sudden "investment tip" from a long-silent account is almost always a sign of compromise.