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Okay, so I just fell down one of the wildest rabbit holes in crypto history. Ever heard of Ellis Pinsky? 15 years old. Pulled off what's literally the largest individual SIM swap heist ever recorded. And the story gets absolutely insane.
So Ellis Pinsky and his crew targeted this crypto investor Michael Turpin after he left a conference. Classic move—they bribed telecom workers to hijack his phone number. Once they had control, Ellis ran scripts to tear through everything: emails, cloud drives, anything that could lead to wallet keys. They found $900 million in Ethereum. Sounds perfect, right? Except it was locked. But then they dug deeper and found $24 million that wasn't. Hours later, Turpin checked his accounts. The main wallet untouched. But $24 million? Completely gone.
This is where Ellis Pinsky's story gets darker. Suddenly rich at 15. He bought a Rolex, stashed it under his bed. But his crew started falling apart. One accomplice ran off with $1.5 million. Another was casually talking about hiring a hitman. It was chaos.
Here's the thing about Ellis Pinsky though—he wasn't some random kid. He grew up in a cramped NYC apartment, got his first Xbox at 13, started learning SQL injection, flipping rare Instagram handles. He had skills. But clout wasn't enough. SIM swapping gave him what he wanted: real money. Bribe a telecom rep, steal a number, intercept texts, reset passwords—empty wallets.
But someone couldn't keep quiet. His partner Nicholas Truglia started bragging online: "Stole $24M. Still can't keep a friend." Used his real name on Coinbase. FBI caught him immediately. Prison time.
Ellis Pinsky? He returned most of the money. Skated on charges because of his age. But got slapped with a $22 million lawsuit from Turpin. Then masked gunmen broke into his home. Stuff got real dark.
Today Ellis Pinsky is apparently a philosophy and CS major at NYU, building startups, trying to repay debts. By 15 he had 562 Bitcoin, telecom insiders on payroll, a lawsuit, and a target on his back. The craziest part? He had no idea how close it all was to completely falling apart. This whole case is basically a masterclass in why operational security and keeping your mouth shut matter in this space.