Key Takeaways
- Tron founder Justin Sun, who invested $75+ million in World Liberty Financial, alleges the platform secretly integrated wallet-freezing capabilities
- World Liberty Financial fired back with “See you in court pal” on X, denying any misconduct
- Sun’s digital wallet was reportedly frozen by the platform in September following suspicious token movements
- WLFI token value has plummeted more than 76% from its all-time high, currently trading around $0.08
- The Trump family’s crypto venture reportedly generated upwards of $460 million during early 2025
An intense confrontation between Tron blockchain creator Justin Sun and Donald Trump’s cryptocurrency platform World Liberty Financial has erupted into public view, featuring mutual accusations and promises of courtroom battles.
Sun, who established the Tron network, represents the most significant documented backer of World Liberty. His investment exceeded $75 million in WLFI tokens beginning in the fourth quarter of 2024, which led to his appointment as a company adviser.
This past Sunday, Sun took to X with allegations that World Liberty had covertly integrated a “backdoor blacklisting function” within the smart contract infrastructure controlling WLFI tokens. According to his claims, this mechanism enabled the organization to freeze or limit any holder’s digital assets without prior notification.
我一直是特朗普总统及其加密友好政策的坚定支持者。
作为World Liberty Financial的早期支持者,我在项目初期投入了大量资金,因为我相信该项目向公众展示的愿景:一个促进金融自由、去除中介、将去中心化金融的福祉带给普通民众的DeFi平台。
然而,从未有人向我或任何投资者披露的是:World…
— H.E. Justin Sun 👨🚀 🌞 (@justinsuntron) April 12, 2026
Sun identified himself as the “first and single largest victim” of this purported functionality. He stated that an individual possessing elevated administrative privileges had placed restrictions on his cryptocurrency wallet.
Furthermore, he characterized the organization as exploiting the cryptocurrency ecosystem like a “personal ATM” and referred to World Liberty’s executive team—which includes members of the Trump family—as “bad actors.”
World Liberty Financial responded swiftly on X, declaring: “We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court pal.” The organization portrayed Sun as someone who assumes “the victim while making baseless allegations.”
Reuters reported being unable to independently authenticate the existence of the alleged blacklisting mechanism or substantiate specifics regarding Sun’s trading patterns.
Context Behind the Wallet Restriction
World Liberty Financial initially restricted Sun’s wallet access in September, following indications that he had begun transferring substantial quantities of his WLFI token holdings. The platform explained at that time it was addressing “malicious or high-risk activity.”
Sun’s initial response characterized the incident as a miscommunication, though his stance dramatically transformed during the recent weekend.
World Liberty’s published risk warnings acknowledge the platform maintains authority to freeze wallet addresses suspected of involvement in unlawful conduct or terms of service violations. Comparable freezing mechanisms exist at other cryptocurrency organizations, including Tether, generally deployed in response to criminal activity or regulatory agency demands.
Dramatic Token Price Decline
The WLFI token reached its lowest recorded valuation during the weekend, sinking to approximately $0.077. This represents a decline exceeding 76% from its initial trading price last autumn, with a 20% drop occurring within the previous seven days alone.
Last March, the SEC resolved a 2023 fraud complaint against Sun through a $10 million settlement. The litigation had included allegations of fraudulent practices, unregistered securities offerings, and undisclosed celebrity endorsement payments. Sun did not acknowledge any violations. The regulatory body’s enforcement director departed soon following the settlement agreement.
On Monday, Sun referenced what he characterized as blockchain evidence demonstrating his wallet’s blacklisting by a solitary account. However, he did not provide these records to Reuters.
