A Solana-based meme coin launched by a wallet linked by blockchain investigators to an alleged theft of U.S. government-controlled crypto assets has collapsed almost entirely within hours of trading.

The token, named John Daghita and trading under the ticker LICK, was created on the Pump.fun launchpad and briefly surged to a market capitalization of roughly $915,000 before falling more than 97% overnight.

Onchain data shows the token later dropped below $25,000 in market value, with current figures placing it near $27,700 after a steep 24-hour decline.

Source: pump.fun

Trading activity indicates that the deployer wallet accumulated tokens early while the market capitalization was still below $21,000, making four purchases before the sharp rally and subsequent collapse.

Bubblemaps Finds Concentrated Supply in LICK Token Debut

Further scrutiny came from blockchain analytics firm Bubblemaps, which reported that the deployer of LICK held approximately 40% of the total token supply at launch.

John Daghita (@lick), who stole $40M from the US government, just launched $LICK on pumpfun and is live streaming on Telegram

He holds 40% of the supply

Unhinged https://t.co/jUku6wIfXg pic.twitter.com/apZQojKnuz

— Bubblemaps (@bubblemaps) January 27, 2026

Such concentration is widely viewed by analysts as a warning sign, as it allows insiders to exert outsized control over price action and liquidity.

Bubblemaps claimed that the same individual tied to the alleged theft controlled the deployer wallet and a significant share of the supply during the token’s launch phase.

The launch attracted attention after blockchain investigator ZachXBT said the wallet associated with the token deployer was connected to tens of millions of dollars in crypto allegedly tied to U.S. government-seized assets.

@ZachXBT alleges a crypto theft from US government wallets is linked to the son of a federal crypto custody contractor’s CEO.#Hack #Cryptohttps://t.co/5G1BLSmHCn

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) January 26, 2026

In an X post on Jan. 23, ZachXBT claimed the individual behind the online alias “John Daghita,” also known as “Lick,” had displayed control over wallets holding approximately $23 million during a recorded dispute with another actor in a Telegram group.

Public records show that Command Services & Support, a Virginia-based firm whose president is Dean Daghita, received a U.S. Marshals Service contract in October 2024 to assist with the custody and disposal of certain digital assets seized by the government.

ZachXBT alleged that John Daghita, the president’s son, gained unauthorized access to wallets connected to those holdings.

The allegations have not been tested in court, and no criminal charges have been announced.

Meme Coin Chaos Deepens Across Solana’s Pump.fun Ecosystem

The incident has also drawn attention from policymakers, as Patrick Witt, director of the White House Crypto Council, said in a post on X that he was reviewing the claims following ZachXBT’s disclosures.

On it. More to follow. https://t.co/lZJHM12Nx5

— Patrick Witt (@patrickjwitt) January 26, 2026

According to BitcoinTreasuries.NET, U.S. authorities may control more than 328,000 Bitcoin through various seizures, including assets from the Bitfinex case, potentially worth around $30 billion at current prices.

Beyond the specific allegations, the LICK collapse fits into a broader pattern within Solana’s meme coin ecosystem.

Data from early 2025 suggests that more than 98% of tokens launched on Pump.fun exhibit characteristics associated with rug pulls or rapid pump-and-dump schemes.

Analysts estimate that only a tiny fraction of the millions of tokens created on the platform ever reach even modest liquidity levels, while the average lifespan of many tokens has dropped to less than 25 minutes before abandonment or sharp declines.

Recent cases have reinforced these concerns, as in December, Solana-based AI token AVA fell more than 96% after onchain analysis showed roughly 40% of its supply had been accumulated by wallets linked to the deployer at launch.

In January, the WhiteWhale memecoin briefly lost around 60% of its market value within minutes after a large holder sold a significant portion of the supply, an event widely described by traders as a rug pull despite later partial recovery.

The post Wallet Tied to US Crypto Theft Launches Solana Meme Coin — Plunges 97% Overnight appeared first on Cryptonews.

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