This report contains references to suicide. If you or someone you know is in crisis, please reach out to someone for help or contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 for free support, available 24/7.
In a tragic turn of events, 23-year-old Arnold Robert Haro directed his last words at the phone in his hand. “If I die, I hope you guys turn this into a memecoin,” he uttered. Moments later, Haro took his life.
Haro passed away on February 21 at his family residence in Madera County, California, as confirmed by a death certificate acquired by WIRED. His suicide was streamed live to his followers on X, where he was known by the handle @MistaFuccYou. The footage of Haro’s death has since been taken down from the platform, though the incident briefly appeared in its trending section.
Following Haro’s death, numerous memecoins—a type of highly speculative cryptocurrency—were created in his honor. Recognizing an opportunity for profit, traders jumped onto one specific coin, which saw its total value soar to $2.1 million. (Since then, the coin has suffered a dramatic loss of 96 percent in value.)
On X, some users claimed that the creators of the MistaFuccYou coin had fulfilled Haro’s last request. However, most condemned the traders’ impulse to capitalize on his death. “If you’re trading this, you’re sick af,” one user expressed.
Speculation circulated on X suggesting that Haro had taken his life due to losing money in a memecoin rug pull—a deceptive tactic where someone creates a new coin, promotes it, and then abruptly sells off their holdings, plummeting the coin’s value for other investors. While WIRED could not confirm this theory, Haro’s friends have rebuffed this narrative. “It wasn’t about crypto … That’s not what these crypto enthusiasts seem to believe,” commented one of Haro’s friends, who goes by j nova on social media. His family, meanwhile, characterized his death as stemming from “his struggle with depression.”
This incident serves as a stark illustration of the moral decline in memecoin trading communities, where only the most reprehensible and unethical ideas garner attention, argues Azeem Khan, cofounder of the Morph blockchain and venture partner at a cryptocurrency investment firm, Foresight Ventures.
“We’ve hit a point where the most potentially intriguing launch people are focusing on is Kanye attempting to launch a Swastika coin,” Khan stated, referencing now-removed posts associated with the artist Kanye West. “That’s how grim this environment is.”
Until last year, launching a memecoin was relatively costly and technically challenging, leading to a limited number of new entries. With the exception of Dogecoin—the original memecoin—and a small number of derivatives, few managed to achieve lasting success.
That dynamic changed with the launch of Pump.Fun, a platform that allows anyone to create a memecoin at no cost. Since its debut in January 2024, millions of memecoins have flooded the market, including those inspired by Haro.