Articles
Crypto Market Analysis

Justin Sun sues World Liberty Financial over token lockup

User Image

匿名により

作成されました April 22, 2026|2 分で読めます
Main Image

Sun said the lawsuit is to protect his rights as a WLFI token holder and doesn't change his support of US President Donald Trump and his administration’s efforts to make the US crypto-friendly.

Tron founder Justin Sun said he is suing Trump-family-backed World Liberty Financial for allegedly freezing his tokens and threatening to burn them “without any proper justification.” 

In a post to social media on Wednesday, Sun said the suit, filed in a California federal court, was meant to protect his rights as a token holder.

“I have tried in good faith to resolve this situation with the World Liberty project team without resorting to litigation. But the project team has refused my requests to unfreeze my tokens and restore my rights as a token holder. They have left me with no choice but to turn to the courts,” he added.

Sun is the largest individual investor in World Liberty, a project tied closely to the Trump family.

Sun previously threatened legal action earlier this month over lengthy lockup periods for WLFI’s governance token and accused WLFI’s recent governance proposal of lacking transparency, saying more than 76% of the voting tokens came from 10 wallets.

Related: World Liberty burns 47M tokens in bid to pump price as slide continues

At the time, the WLFI project team said on X that the claims were “baseless allegations” and added, “We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court pal.”

Cointelegraph has contacted the Tron and World Liberty Financial teams for additional comment about the lawsuit. 

Meanwhile, Sun said on X that the lawsuit doesn't change his views on President Donald Trump or his administration. 

“Unfortunately, certain individuals on the World Liberty project team have been operating the project in a manner that goes against President Trump’s values,” Sun said.

Magazine: Will the CLARITY Act be good — or bad — for DeFi 

Source: CoinTelegraph


最近公開された他の記事

Secret Network bridge exploited for $4.7M with ‘infinite mint’ bug
Secret Network bridge exploited for $4.7M with ‘infinite mint’ bug

Ethereum

An exploit of the Secret Network went undiscovered for a week as the hacker moved the loot into Ethe...

Taiko urges users to withdraw as bridge exploit drains $1.7M
Taiko urges users to withdraw as bridge exploit drains $1.7M

Ethereum

Taiko’s bridge and ERC20 Vault on Ethereum suffered a compromise in its chain state verification m...

Morgan Stanley amends Ethereum, Solana ETFs to reveal record cheap fees
Morgan Stanley amends Ethereum, Solana ETFs to reveal record cheap fees

Solana

ETF analyst Eric Balchunas says Morgan Stanley’s plan to charge 0.14% fees on two upcoming crypto ...

South Korea pushes Travel Rule expansion for smaller crypto transfers
South Korea pushes Travel Rule expansion for smaller crypto transfers

Crypto Market Analysis

South Korea’s FIU is calling for broader crypto transfer reporting rules during FATF talks, citing...

US dollar strength hits highest since May 2025: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week
US dollar strength hits highest since May 2025: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin

Bitcoin faced a resurgent US dollar index and macro hurdles as it circled $64,000, but July seasonal...

Q2 2026 emerges as most-hacked quarter on record with 83 incidents
Q2 2026 emerges as most-hacked quarter on record with 83 incidents

Crypto Market Analysis

Crypto hackers stole $755 million across 83 cybersecurity incidents, as cross–chain bridges remain...