A bombshell investigation has exposed alleged insider trading by senior employees at Axiom Exchange, one of crypto’s fastest-rising platforms. Blockchain investigator ZachXBT, who was retained to examine misconduct allegations, uncovered evidence that staffers allegedly exploited weak internal access controls to spy on users’ private wallet activity and front-run high-profile meme coin trades since early 2025.
The alleged activity reportedly began in early 2025 and continued for months before a February 2026 private group call recording exposed the scale of the operation. The allegations have not been proven in court, and no criminal charges have been filed at the time of publication.

Broox Bauer’s Damning Admissions
At the center is Broox Bauer, a New York-based senior business development (BD) employee. In a February 2026 private group call recording obtained by the investigator, Broox brazenly detailed his toolkit: Axiom’s internal dashboard, which lets him track users by referral code, wallet address, or unique ID (UID). “I can find out anything to do with that person,” he claimed, describing how he ramped up lookups from 10-20 wallets initially to avoid suspicion.
In the recording, Broox also outlined specific “ground rules” for requesting wallet lookups and said he would provide full wallet lists once requests were approved, suggesting a structured and ongoing system.
The Insider Network Expands
The call featured Broox strategizing with close friend “Gowno” (Seb), a newly hired Axiom moderator. Broox outlined a plan to help Gowno net $200,000 quickly by mirroring his own alleged scheme, sharing wallet intel for profitable trades. According to the investigator, the alleged scheme may have been operating for over a year, with Broox claiming in private chats that the activity had already generated significant profits. Neither Ryan nor Mystery were present in the recorded call.
Hard Evidence from Screenshots and Sheets
Evidence spans months. In April 2025, Broox screenshot an internal dashboard revealing trader “Jerry’s” private wallets. August brought more: images of “Monix’s” registration details and connected wallets, plus discussions targeting “AURA” meme coin traders. The group compiled a Google Sheet of key opinion leader (KOL) wallets, graphed from Axiom data.
Screenshots shared in private chats also showed exchange balances, which investigators say suggested the activity had already produced substantial financial gains. Multiple key opinion leaders (KOLs) contacted during the investigation independently confirmed that the wallet data attributed to them matched their private trading activity, strengthening the credibility of the leaked dashboard information.
Prime Targets and On-Chain Trails
Marcell exemplifies the targets: Traders reusing private wallets rarely publicize them, making Axiom’s privileged data gold for front-running. Broox’s main wallet, FarpaWkzio7WQVpQeu2eURvNQZ3pCBZupJ95wUjoHcUN, links to high-volume meme trades. Related funds flowed to centralized exchange (CEX) deposits like 9HtKkLzTVUGMS9BDMSXbVjooP1rVoeiFPj3tEtmj7Qn4 and others. While on-chain noise from memes complicates proof, Axiom’s internal logs could reveal trade timing synced to lookups.
Axiom Responds, But Questions Linger
The investigator, hired after misconduct tips, notified Axiom today. In a statement (attached), co-founders denied knowledge but pledged a review. Critics have raised concerns about the dashboard’s scope, which reportedly provided full wallet lists with timestamps, tracked addresses, transaction histories, nicknames, and linked accounts to business development staff, calling it a compliance nightmare with limited apparent oversight
The investigation also found little to no internal monitoring or audit trails to detect unusual employee lookup activity, raising concerns about broader systemic compliance failures rather than isolated misconduct.
Meanwhile, prediction markets continue to price in fallout. With Polymarket Bets Hit $29M, traders are wagering not only on reputational damage but also on whether regulators step in or criminal probes emerge.
Legal Reckoning Ahead?
“This isn’t just sloppy; it’s a structural failure inviting abuse,” the investigator said. Broox’s NYC base flags Southern District of New York (SDNY) jurisdiction for potential wire fraud, insider trading, or securities law violations. No charges have been filed, but the fallout could ripple through crypto hiring and compliance norms.
Axiom didn’t respond to requests for employee status updates. Broox, Gowno, Ryan, and Mystery couldn’t be reached. As platforms chase revenue, this saga underscores the perils of rapid growth without safeguards.








