Trump family's World Liberty Financial sues billionaire for defamation – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pixabay)
Miami-Dade County, Florida – World Liberty Financial, the cryptocurrency platform co-founded by President Donald Trump and his sons, filed a defamation lawsuit against crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun on Monday. The action intensifies a bitter dispute that began last month when Sun accused the company of fraud over frozen token holdings. Filed in state court here, the suit portrays Sun’s social media attacks as a calculated effort to damage the firm’s reputation after it enforced contractual safeguards.[1][2]
A High-Stakes Clash in Crypto Governance
The conflict highlights tensions in decentralized finance, where token issuers hold mechanisms to protect communities from perceived threats. World Liberty Financial launched in 2024 as a DeFi platform inspired by Trump’s vision, drawing major investments amid the sector’s volatility. Sun, founder of the TRON blockchain, emerged as one of its largest backers, pouring roughly $75 million into $WLFI governance tokens starting in late 2024. His early infusion helped stabilize the project during initial struggles.[1]
Relations soured when World Liberty detected irregularities in Sun-linked activities. The company invoked its disclosed authority to freeze certain tokens held by Sun-affiliated entities, a power outlined in sales terms and unlock agreements. Sun had publicly praised the project months earlier, even after learning of these provisions.[3]
Sun Strikes First with Fraud Claims
Sun initiated legal action on April 21 in federal court in California’s Northern District. He alleged World Liberty unlawfully seized his $WLFI holdings – valued by some estimates up to $1 billion – and blocked his voting rights. The suit described the freeze as unauthorized and part of a pressure campaign to force additional investments in a new stablecoin and equity.[4]
World Liberty dismissed those accusations at the time as meritless, asserting the measures protected users from misconduct. Sun’s complaint sought damages, a jury trial, and release of the tokens. That case remains pending, much like the new Florida filing.[1]
Defamation Allegations Take Center Stage
World Liberty’s complaint accuses Sun of launching a “public smear campaign” on X, where his nearly 4 million followers amplified the posts. It claims he labeled the platform “World Tyranny,” called its leaders “bad actors,” and misrepresented governance as improper – statements viewed millions of times and echoed by influencers and bots. The firm alleges these falsehoods cost business opportunities and eroded trust.[2][3]
Specific misconduct claims include straw purchases to mask buys for others, unauthorized transfers to exchanges like Binance, and short-selling to suppress $WLFI’s price – potentially tied to $300 million in movements. Sun knew the freeze rights existed, the suit argues, yet proceeded with threats of litigation that would “light World Liberty on fire.” Tom Clare, the firm’s attorney, stated the action served as a last resort to correct the record and shield stakeholders.[3]
- Two parallel suits: Sun’s federal fraud case in California vs. World Liberty’s state defamation claim in Florida.
- Jury trials requested in both, with unspecified damages and retractions on the table.
- Broader implications for DeFi transparency and high-profile crypto investments.
Immediate Reactions Signal Prolonged Battle
Sun quickly rejected the suit as a “meritless PR stunt,” vowing to prevail in court. Donald Trump Jr. reposted World Liberty’s announcement with an endorsement of its account, while CEO Zach Witkoff anticipated revelations through litigation. Neither side has backed down, turning what began as a major investment into a public spectacle.[5]
As these cases unfold across jurisdictions, they underscore risks in crypto alliances blending politics, wealth, and technology. Resolution could reshape perceptions of governance in Trump-linked ventures and set precedents for token controls in DeFi.
