Trump, Warren, and the crypto crossfire: Senators demand probe into World Liberty Financial
A growing political storm is brewing around World Liberty Financial, as Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jack Reed call for an investigation into the Trump family’s crypto company over alleged ties to high-risk foreign actors.
- Watchdog report claims WLFI tokens reached wallets tied to North Korea, Russia, Iran, and Tornado Cash.
- Trump-affiliated entity holds 22.5B tokens, receiving 75% of sale proceeds.
- Senators warn WLF may lack strong AML and sanctions controls.
World Liberty Financial ( WLFI ) — one of the most prominent and controversial crypto ventures in the U.S. — is backed and operated by several members of the Trump family. The company’s rapid expansion into governance tokens, stablecoins, and digital assets has also attracted national attention.
Now, concerns around its token sales and potential exposure to foreign operatives have pushed the firm into the center of a national security debate.
So far, there have already been pay-to-play allegations regarding WLFI’s role in Binance’s $2 billion deal with an Emirati fund. Afterward, Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, who had served a 4-month prison term, received a pardon from President Donald Trump.
Zhao’s personal attorney later denied the corruption allegations, and Trump told reporters he didn’t know who Zhao was.
Beyond Binance
Senators Warren and Reed now warn that Trump’s World Liberty Financial may have sold governance tokens to wallets linked to North Korea, Russia, Iran, and Tornado Cash. The firm holds over 22.5 billion WLFI tokens, worth more than $3 billion.
WLFI buyers had past blockchain ties to sanctioned or illicit networks, one watchdog group alleges.
Accountable.US released a report claiming that some WLFI tokens had been sold to suspicious blockchain wallets. These wallets showed past connections to the North Korean Lazarus Group, a sanctioned Russian sanctions-evasion tool, an Iranian crypto exchange, and Tornado Cash.
Because WLFI provides voting power within the ecosystem, the report questioned whether foreign actors could gain influence inside a Trump-linked crypto firm.
Warren and Reed responded by sending a formal request to the Treasury Department and the Department of Justice. Their primary concerns were the potential for illicit finance, the possibility of foreign influence, and the structure of WLFI’s token distribution.
A Trump-affiliated entity holds 22.5 billion WLFI tokens and receives seventy-five percent of revenue from token sales. The senators argued that this arrangement creates a financial conflict of interest for current administration officials.
World Liberty Financial denied the allegations and stated that it performs strict anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer checks. The company said it rejected millions of dollars from buyers who failed compliance reviews.
Despite the denial, questions continue to grow as WLFI’s stablecoin, USD1, and its international connections draw scrutiny. The Department of Justice and the Treasury are expected to respond to the senators’ request.
What to expect in the coming developments
World Liberty Financial entered the crypto sector under a high-profile spotlight. With Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and President Trump himself listed in key roles, the project presented itself as a major American competitor in digital finance.
The company began promoting expansions that included a stablecoin, a debit card, and tokenized commodity assets.
If an investigation proceeds, World Liberty Financial could face pressure to disclose its compliance procedures. The outcome may influence upcoming crypto legislation and shape how governance tokens are monitored in the U.S.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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