Crypto Coin AVAX Drops 11% After Self-Described Whistleblower Says Avalanche Weaponized Litigation Against Rivals
Ava Labs CEO rejected the accusation as “conspiracy theory nonsense.”
The AVAX token dropped to its lowest price since July 13 on Monday after a self-described “whistleblower” website accused that Ava Labs, the company behind the Avalanche blockchain, paid lawyers to hurt competitors and keep regulators at bay.
On Friday, Crypto Leaks, a self-proclaimed whistleblower, published a report saying that some years ago New York-based Ava Labs focused on developing Avalanche’s ecosystem, and law firm Roche Freedman made a deal under which Freedman would collect confidential information of rival companies and trap them under class-action lawsuits in return for massive amounts of AVAX tokens and Ava Labs corporate stock.
The report said:
AVAX has dropped 22% from $23 to $17.90 since Friday – with prices losing 11% in the past 24 hours alone, according to CoinDesk data. As of this writing, AVAX was the only cryptocurrency with a market cap of at least $1 billion to report a double-digit percentage decline for the 24-hour period. At press time, bitcoin, ether and other major cryptocurrencies nursed 1% to 5% losses.
Emin Gün Sirer, Ava Labs founder and CEO, dismissed the piece as “conspiracy theory nonsense.”
The report, however, has caught the eye of industry bigwigs, with some in the investor community calling the report disturbing while others wondering whether both parties will now face legal scrutiny for perverse incentive relationship.
Meanwhile, in a now-deleted tweet, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao called the report “wild,” assuming the legitimacy of the evidence videos published by Crypto Leaks. Zhao said Binance was the target even though the centralized exchange isn’t a direct competitor of Avalanche.
Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple Labs, wrote on Twitter Monday that he had “never met or spoken to (much less invested in) Kyle Roche,” in response to a claim in the Crypto Leaks article that Garlinghouse had done so.
Avalanche gained prominence with other layer 1 blockchains last year, thanks to high transaction costs on the Ethereum blockchain. AVAX surged a whopping 3,300% in 2021, hitting record highs above $140.
The token peaked with the broader market in November as the U.S. Federal Reserve shifted focus to inflation control and monetary tightening. Since then, the cryptocurrency market valuation has declined from $3 trillion to less than $1 trillion. Bitcoin, the leading cryptocurrency by market value, fell below $20,000 early Monday, having reached a record high of $69,000 in November.