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Last Updated:April 23, 2026, 03:22 IST
The core of the dispute centres on an alleged attempt by World Liberty Financial to claw back or freeze tokens previously allocated to Sun

President Donald Trump sits as Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, from left, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and from right, Bo Hines, a member of the presidential council of advisers for digital assets, and White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks attend the White House Crypto Summit in Washington, March 7, 2025. (File pic/AP)
The Trump family’s high-profile foray into the digital asset space has hit a major legal roadblock as billionaire crypto mogul Justin Sun filed a lawsuit against World Liberty Financial (WLF). The legal action, filed in a US federal court, alleges that the venture orchestrated an “illegal scheme" to effectively extort Sun and seize his holdings of WLFI tokens, the governance cryptocurrency at the heart of the platform.
Allegations of Token Seizure and Extortive Tactics
The core of the dispute centres on an alleged attempt by World Liberty Financial to claw back or freeze tokens previously allocated to Sun, who was an early and significant backer of the project. Sun, the founder of the TRON network, claims that the venture’s leadership utilised coercive tactics to force a renegotiation of his stake. According to the filing, WLF leadership allegedly threatened to invalidate his digital assets unless he agreed to new, less favourable terms—a move Sun’s legal team has characterised as a sophisticated form of corporate extortion.
The lawsuit suggests that the “scheme" was designed to reduce Sun’s influence over the platform’s governance while simultaneously bolstering the company’s treasury. This internal friction comes at a sensitive time for the Trump family, as the project was marketed as a revolutionary “DeFi" (Decentralised Finance) platform intended to bypass traditional banking gatekeepers.
High-Stakes Friction in the Crypto Inner Circle
The falling out between Justin Sun and the Trump-backed venture represents a significant rift within the upper echelons of the crypto world. Sun had initially been a vocal proponent of World Liberty Financial, famously investing $30 million into the project during its launch phase in late 2024. His involvement was seen as a crucial “seal of approval" from the established crypto industry for the political family’s new business.
World Liberty Financial has yet to release a detailed rebuttal to the specific extortion claims, though spokespeople for the venture have previously alluded to compliance and “governance adjustments" being necessary for the long-term health of the ecosystem. The legal battle now threatens to overshadow the project’s operational goals, as discovery processes may shed light on the private dealings and tokenomics of the WLFI ecosystem.
Market Implications and Regulatory Scrutiny
For the broader digital asset market, this lawsuit adds a layer of reputational risk to an already controversial project. Regulators, including the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), have been closely monitoring WLF’s token sale structures. A public legal battle involving allegations of extortion and illegal schemes is likely to intensify this oversight, potentially triggering broader investigations into how the platform manages its “whales" or large-scale investors.
As the litigation proceeds, the “TACO" (Trump Always Chickens Out) theory often cited by market traders is being tested in a different arena. Rather than a diplomatic de-escalation, the Trump family now finds itself locked in a kinetic legal skirmish with one of the few individuals who possessed the capital and clout to make their crypto ambitions a reality. The outcome of this case will not only determine the fate of Justin Sun’s tokens but will also serve as a verdict on the viability of celebrity-backed decentralised finance.
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First Published:
April 23, 2026, 03:22 IST
News business cryptocurrency Token Wars: Why Crypto Billionaire Justin Sun Is Suing Trump’s World Liberty Financial For 'Criminal Extortion'
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