ZachXBT’s Crypto Sleuthing Secures Conviction in High-Profile Twitter Hack Case
Crypto investigator ZachXBT delivers justice—again. This time, their blockchain forensics nailed the perpetrator behind the infamous Twitter hack that shook the digital asset space.
How it went down: By tracing on-chain breadcrumbs—wallet addresses, transaction patterns, and that one careless KYC slip—ZachXBT's team built an airtight case. The hacker's mistake? Underestimating the power of transparent ledgers.
The fallout: A landmark conviction that proves blockchain's double-edged nature—great for anonymity until someone like ZachXBT reverse-engineers your entire operation. Meanwhile, traditional finance still can't track stolen credit cards across a spreadsheet.
What Did Albert Redman Do?
Redman was in June 2022 associated with a severe violation where there was unauthorized access to Twitter’s internal admin interface (commonly referred to as an “X panel”). He had sold access to this interface for 250 ETH (which amounts to hundreds of thousands of dollars during that time), and more than 10 prominent Twitter accounts were compromised.
Some of the victims included popular names such as Beeple, JRNY, Nouns DAO, Zeneca, and DeeKay, among many others. These accounts were thereafter utilized to promote phishing scams that deceived followers and stole millions in crypto assets.
Redman is no stranger to cybercrime. He has also been credited with a SIM swap attack on investor Josh Jones in 2020, in which $37 million in crypto was stolen. Redman has operated under various aliases, such as Cream, 4K, Antihero, and Cam, in the past.
Court’s Decision
The U.S. court has ordered Cameron Redman to pay $248,257.07 to the victims. He must make the full payment within 14 days. If he goes to prison, he’s encouraged to join a program to help repay the money.

The payment includes all assets, even those that have not yet been discovered. The U.S. government can collect it anytime, and some details of the case are still secret.
ZachXBT also mentioned that other known scammers, HZ (Chase Senecal) and Two1 (Youssef Taman), had previously used Redman’s panel to carry out similar phishing attacks.
Redman’s conviction is seen as a major victory in the fight against crypto fraud. Many in the crypto and NFT space have praised ZachXBT for his consistent efforts in holding online scammers accountable.
Also Read: ZachXBT Claims Garden Finance’s Illicit Role in Laundering $1.4B Bybit Hack Funds
