Logan Paul Threatens To Sue Coffeezilla For Saying CryptoZoo Scam
Key Point:
- Paul argued that Coffeezilla’s inquiry should not be taken seriously, accusing him of prejudice and calling his general credibility into doubt.
- Paul added that he unknowingly hired criminal elements who worked on the projects.
Logan Paul, an American media personality and wrestler, has fought against prominent YouTuber Stephen Findeisen, a.k.a. Coffeezilla, following charges of defrauding investors in the cryptocurrency project CryptoZoo.
Coffeezilla’s investigation into the purported CryptoZoo fraud was clouded by malice, according to Paul, who accused the investigative journalist of exploiting his identity to acquire views and money in a YouTube video broadcast on January 4.
Furthermore, Paul argued that Coffeezilla’s inquiry should not be taken seriously, accusing him of prejudice and calling his general credibility into doubt.
You have used my name for views and money. Like many on this platform, you have successfully used my name for views and money. While your work used to be impartial, your addiction to clicks has clouded your judgment, and you’ve made very real errors with very real repercussions.
Paul threatened to sue Coffeezilla for spreading false information and distributing an “illegal recording.” The tape in question was a private phone call between Paul and his manager Jeff Levin, which Coffeezilla had made public on his YouTube channel.
I suggest you use the money you got from pumping your Patreon to hire a good lawyer; you’re going to need it. See you in court
Paul also stated that he unwittingly recruited criminals to work on the projects. He singled out a blockchain engineer named Zack Kelling, who was essential to Coffeezilla’s investigation. In order to substantiate the criminal aspect, Paul claimed that Kelling had repeated run-ins with the law and that Coffeezilla had not purposefully fact-checked the developer.
He went on to say that the engineer fled to Switzerland with the source code and was holding it hostage for $1 million.
Furthermore, Coffeezilla alleged that the project’s creators, numbering around 30, had not been paid since the game was not playable.
It’s interesting that Coffeezilla said Paul’s team didn’t spend the $1 million they had originally claimed to have put into making the game. They substituted existing programming code for their own by stealing it. Paul emphasized that the game was still under production and that the company only had three devs.
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