World Liberty Financial, a cryptocurrency firm with close ties to former US President Donald Trump and his family, is under increased scrutiny following a call for investigation from two Democratic senators. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jack Reed have urged federal regulators to examine the firm due to concerns regarding its alleged connections to sanctioned individuals in North Korea and Russia.
In a letter directed to Attorney General Pamela Bondi and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the senators expressed that the company”s token offerings could pose significant national security risks. They pointed to evidence that governance tokens from WLFI were acquired by blockchain addresses associated with foreign entities, as reported by CNBC.
The senators” concerns were largely informed by a September report from the nonpartisan watchdog group Accountable.US. This report asserted that World Liberty Financial had sold tokens to participants linked to the Lazarus Group, a North Korean state-sponsored hacking organization, as well as to entities involved with sanctioned Russian sanctions-evasion mechanisms and an Iranian cryptocurrency exchange.
Warren and Reed warned that these transactions effectively granted adversaries governance rights within the protocol, thereby “giving adversaries a seat at the table.” In response, World Liberty Financial has denied the accusations, claiming to have conducted thorough anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) checks, rejecting millions from presale participants who did not meet their criteria.
The political implications surrounding WLFI are amplified by its ownership structure. Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and Barron Trump are listed as co-founders, with Donald Trump serving as “Co-Founder Emeritus.” DT Marks DEFI LLC, a Trump-affiliated entity, reportedly holds 22.5 billion WLFI tokens, valued at over $3 billion, and is entitled to 75% of the revenue generated from token sales. This has raised alarms among the senators about potential financial conflicts of interest for administration officials, given that a substantial portion of token-sale proceeds flows directly to the Trump family.
Moreover, the rapid growth of World Liberty Financial, which includes plans for a debit card and tokenized commodities, combined with alleged weak compliance measures, raises concerns about facilitating illicit finance activities.
The pressure on World Liberty Financial has intensified, especially as its USD1 stablecoin was reportedly utilized in a substantial investment into Binance by a UAE-backed fund shortly before a major chip agreement was secured with Washington.
While the allegations against WLFI have sparked significant debate, a recent analysis from blockchain researcher Nick Bax cast doubt on the accusations linking a North Korean wallet to the firm. Bax investigated the transactions mentioned in the watchdog report and concluded that they stemmed from false positives, unrelated to actual interactions with sanctioned entities. He explained that the transactions associated with the Lazarus Group were linked to a joke memecoin contract called Dream Cash and not indicative of any illicit engagement.
Bax noted the personal impact of these false allegations, revealing that a user identified as @shryder1337 had their substantial holdings of WLFI tokens frozen due to the mistaken association with North Korean activities.
As the situation unfolds, the implications for World Liberty Financial and its stakeholders remain significant, not just for the firm itself, but also for the broader cryptocurrency landscape and its relationship with regulatory bodies.











































