

Haliey Welch, identified largely because the star of the viral “Hawk Tuah” meme, is dealing with criticism after her newly launched cryptocurrency nosedived in worth.
Her “Hawk” digital coin hit a $490m market cap shortly after it launched on Wednesday, earlier than immediately shedding greater than 95% of its worth inside hours.
This has led some, together with YouTube cryptocurrency investigator Coffeezilla, to accuse Ms Welch of scamming traders with a “pump and dump” – the place the folks behind a coin hype up its worth earlier than launch, then promote it for revenue.
She has denied allegations that her staff offered any of the tokens they owned.
The BBC has approached Ms Welch’s representatives for remark.
“Crew hasn’t offered one token,” she wrote in a copy and pasted post on X (previously Twitter) on Wednesday.
She added that no “KOL” (key opinion leaders) have been gifted a free token.
Ms Welch had beforehand distributed free Hawk tokens to some followers forward of the launch throughout social media.
Hawk launched on the Solana blockchain at round 22:00 GMT on Wednesday, and its market capitalisation soared to highs of $490m shortly after.
Nonetheless it fell sharply from this excessive to round $60m simply 20 minutes later.
Followers and traders have accused Ms Welch and her staff of “deceptive” and “betraying” them and steered the launch had been a “rug pull” – the place promoters of a cryptocurrency attract patrons, solely to cease buying and selling exercise and make off with cash raised from gross sales.
A group word on Ms Welch’s X publish contests her clarification, saying her staff had been promoting their Hawk cash since launch.
Rip-off allegations
Coffeezilla, actual title Stephen Findeisen, additionally claimed that Hawk gave “insiders” a bonus.
“Sadly with conditions like this, they are not concentrating on crypto bros, they’re largely concentrating on precise followers who’ve by no means been concerned within the crypto house earlier than,” he mentioned in a video seen greater than 1.4 million occasions.
He accused Ms Welch’s staff of “benefiting from a rug pull”.
“These folks have been unwilling to take any accountability” of the “Hawk Tuah rip-off”, he claimed, after sharing a clip of him chatting with among the folks behind the cryptocurrency.
Ms Welch’s publish on X claimed that her staff tried to forestall so-called “snipers”, who purchase and promote cryptocurrencies shortly at moments when they’re prone to take advantage of cash from a spot in purchase and promote worth – typically utilizing automated buying and selling instruments – by imposing increased charges on one alternate.
The staff behind the cryptocurrency, OverHere, has dismissed different claims in regards to the launch in an X post.
It pressured that “Haliey’s Crew has offered completely no tokens in any respect”.
Meme cash comparable to this have been booming in recognition on account of their jokey, low-cost enchantment for traders.
They’re usually seen as being much less dangerous than extra excessive profile crypto property like Bitcoin or Ethereum, however carry the identical risks – with usually no safety for individuals who lose cash on them.
Carol Alexander, professor of finance at Sussex College, told the BBC on Thursday that whereas extra younger persons are investing in meme cash, a lot of them are shedding cash.
A number of celebrities or influencers who’ve ventured into the crypto market have confronted comparable backlashes.
In 2021, Kim Kardashian was fined $1.26m by US regulators after she did not disclose that she had been paid to publish an advert for a cryptocurrency scheme referred to as EthereumMax.
Extra lately, YouTuber Logan Paul was accused of deceptive followers by selling crypto cash or investments without divulging his own financial interest in them.
Who’s ‘Hawk Tuah Woman’ Haliey Welch?
Identified on-line because the “Hawk Tuah lady”, Ms Welch went viral after talking the onomatopoeia “hawk tuah” – imitating the sound of somebody spitting – throughout an interview in June.
It made the 22-year-old, from Belfast, Tennessee, an in a single day web sensation.
She amassed a whole bunch of 1000’s of followers throughout varied social platforms and launched her personal merchandise and a podcast referred to as “Discuss Tuah”.

Her supervisor told the Hollywood Reporter in July that she was distinctive in not having sought out web fame, having been off social media for psychological well being causes for a number of months earlier than showing within the now-viral “Hawk Tuah” video.
Rolling Stone has likened her humorous, small-town persona to a “Gen Z Dolly Parton”.
Ms Welch advised outlet TMZ forward of Hawk’s launch on Wednesday that she launched it to deal with “a bunch of imposters” pretending to be her and promoting their very own cash.
“It is a actually good option to get all my followers and group to work together and are available collectively,” she mentioned.