AlphaTick: A Sold-Out "AI Trading" Token That Drained Its Own Liquidity
AlphaTick marketed itself as an AI-driven trading protocol with a token presale and a polished launchpad. A Manchester developer put in 13.4 ETH. The token listed, ran for forty minutes, and the team pulled the pool. We traced the proceeds across two bridges before they reached a mixer.
- Vector
- AI-Token Presale Rug-Pull
- Instrument
- ETH + USDC (Ethereum, Arbitrum)
- Reported loss
- £52,800
- Case opened
- February 2026
- Funds recovered
- 31% (£16,400)
- Claimant
- Software developer, Manchester UK
Operator on file AlphaTick — read the full IntelliCtech scam-broker dossier.
01How AlphaTick built the trap
AlphaTick presented a clean whitepaper, an "AI trading engine" demo, and a presale hosted on a launchpad it controlled. The claimant found it through a paid post in a developer forum that linked to an audit badge belonging to a firm with no verifiable track record. The presale page showed a live "raised" counter and a per-wallet cap to manufacture scarcity.
He contributed across two transactions and received AlphaTick tokens under a vesting contract that, critically, only the deployer could modify. The site claimed liquidity was "locked," but there was no lock you could independently verify against the LP token on-chain.
02Where it broke
AlphaTick listed on a decentralized exchange with a thin, seeded pool. For roughly forty minutes the price rose and the project Telegram filled with celebration. Then the deployer called the liquidity-removal function, swapped the paired ETH out, and disabled transfers through an owner-only switch the website had insisted did not exist.
Our on-chain review showed the textbook rug signature: unlocked LP behind a "locked" claim, an owner-only trading toggle, and a renounce that had never actually happened. The pulled ETH bridged to Arbitrum, split across nine wallets, reconsolidated, and entered a mixing service.
I read the contract. I just did not grasp that "ownership renounced" on the website meant nothing when the deployed bytecode still had an owner.
03How we recovered part of it
- 01Reconstructed the flow. We mapped the deployer address, the liquidity-removal transaction and the nine-wallet split into a timestamped graph the claimant filed with Action Fraud and his exchange.
- 02Tagged the off-ramps. Two of the split wallets cashed out at a centralized exchange before the mixer. We identified the deposit addresses and the platform operating them.
- 03Filed the freeze request. Through that exchange’s law-enforcement portal, with the claimant’s crime reference, we requested a hold on the two flagged deposit accounts.
- 04Documented the pre-mixer trail. For the mixed funds we produced a probabilistic trace up to the mixer entry, supporting an insurance and tax-loss claim.
- 05Saw the claim through. The frozen balance on the two accounts was returned after a multi-week review; the mixed remainder was written off with full documentation.
£16,400 of £52,800 returned from the two off-ramped wallets. The portion routed through a mixer was unrecoverable but fully documented for tax and insurance.
04Warning signs we flagged
- A "locked liquidity" claim with no on-chain lock you can verify yourself on the LP token.
- A contract that says ownership is renounced while still exposing owner-only functions on-chain.
- An "AI trading" narrative used to justify a token with no working product.
- A per-wallet cap and a live "raised" counter engineered purely for urgency.
- Vesting controlled entirely by the deployer, with no third-party escrow.
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