The word "Trump" is shown as part of some factual ((( media ))) headlines and spoken by the scammer interviewed. Coffeezilla never says it I think, and he doesn't do cheeky implications like the Legal Eagle tier propaganda tubers do. He's clearly only mad about the trend of the little guy getting hurt, the scammer walking away and prosecution not getting better but worse, regardless of current administration. Trump is also shown in a photograph used to promote a crypto rug, directly related to the story, but Trump doesn't take the spotlight.
Coffeezilla even refrains from mentioning any of the crypto shit Trump did (TRUMP coin, Melania NFT, crypto scam backed donors, Bitcoin shilling), which a biased propagandist would go apeshit about.
His channel is focused and unbiased, he's a real investigative journalist unlike most of the shabbos goy journos with their ((( agendas ))). "Crime is legal" is his way of screaming into the void like he explains with the head grabbing skeleton T-shirt design. There is no political bias in his stories, only moral right and wrong, scammers and victims and a system that continues to do nothing to protect the working man.
Imagine being a white person and your government ruining your community by sending more and more immigrants and there's no hope, no end in sight to the crime and disruption they cause. That's basically him in the crypto space with the invasion of scammers. Instead of reporting on the HOA banning hentai garden gnomes or how a white community built a house for a homeless white guy and his dog, he has to report on a crackhead nigger home invading a white family then bragging about it on tiktok and walking away clean.
In this video a criminal goes on record implicating himself of scamming the public.
>at what point do regulators look at interviews like this and say "there have to be consequences"
Coffeezilla - Exposing the WORST Celebrity Scammer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_oLziAyN_o
>we joke on this channel
>well it's not really a joke, it's sort of a meme
>that "crime is legal"
>it's to cope with all this
<regulators are dropping cases like hotcakes
<people are walking
<people that were already prosecuted are walking away
>you hope that there isn't a full abandonment of standards and laws
>my question is, if there is a line, what is that line?
>Sahil Arora in our interview basically admits to
<targeting U.S. celebrities
<scamming their fans
<scamming the celebrities
>and then brags about it publicly
>there was a reason Sahil was comfortable to come on my show
>we talked about "should he be admitting this stuff", "is there gonna be consequences for this"
>Sahil said no, he doesn't think there are gonna be any consequences for what he talks about
Sahil Arora, high profile serial scammer of U.S. victims says
>before Trump, I could imagine people getting jailed
>after Trump, there is just no way
>people like me should not exist in the space
>you know things are bleak when a self professed rug puller is like
>"yeah this probably shouldn't be happening"
>"I probably shouldn't be able to get away with this"
>but this is the message we are sending
>you can totally do this, you can totally get away with this and brag about it on video
>it's so depressing
Coffeezilla's intro
>but first I need to give a legal disclaimer
>I'm about to talk to Sahil [scammer by his own admission] about crime, fraud, prison
>and I wanna make it clear that in light of recent events
>it's now my new position that I believe crime is probably legal in America
>or at least the kind we're talking about [crypto scams]
>I certainly don't wanna defame any innocent criminals on the show
>so I'm changing my legal disclaimer in light of recent events
>and also selling ((( merch ))) to get the word out ("Crime is legal!" T-shirts)
Headlines shown in the video:
Reuters - US Justice Dept disbands crypto enforcement team, citing Trump order https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-justice-dept-disbands-cryptocurrency-enforcement-unit-2025-04-08/
AP - Convicted of bilking investors, Nikola founder [Trevor Milton] and Trump donor gets a presidential pardon https://apnews.com/article/nikola-trevor-milton-fraud-trump-pardon-3fcebb0a3820cecb205656f2dc3f6764
CNBC - SEC drops Binance lawsuit, ending one of last remaining crypto enforcement actions https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/29/sec-drops-binance-lawsuit-ending-one-of-last-remaining-crypto-actions.html
Nikola Motors scam is Theranos tier funny: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1oqqnkkTKVM
Trevor Milton, instead of being in jail, has just released a feature length documentary, "Conviction or Conspiracy": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1NOofxXSAc
>1. Has there been actual laws passed in recent times that have actually-legalized financial misdeeds that were crimes beforehand?
"Crime is legal" is a catchphrase for scammers getting away with it in practice. Crypto law enforcement which has always been a joke is being faded out even more. If you're into crypto, you know almost all projects are the exact type of fraud that the SEC and market regulations were made for, but nobody goes to jail.
>2. Last I recall was something about insider-trading being basically-legalized and I don't remember any context. Furthermore last I heard it was current-trump-admin that legalized it, is this correct or incorrect?
I wouldn't know, I'm a good goy, pay my ((( taxes ))) and not notice things the media doesn't want me to.
>3. Was Trump's pardon of a crypto scammer a one-off thing, that has made other scammers far-more-bold?
We all know it's not right. Trevor Milton doesn't deserve to go free. He was convicted of securities fraud. Big time stocks fraud, into the billions, not some crypto rug. This one case isn't an issue, Biden's handlers also issued over 1000 pardons in the last weeks. But it does send a message that scamming is all right, especially if there's "10% for the big guy", whatever ZOGbot party big guy's in.
>far-more-bold
Not far more, but like Sahil said, crypto scammer were always brazen, whichever red or blue ZOG it was at the time. At this point they're even more relaxed.