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TRUMP2024
World Liberty Financial and Justin Sun turn their conflict over the WLFI token into an open legal battle. The case goes beyond a simple disagreement between investors. It concerns reputation, governance, and trust in highly politicized crypto projects.
World Liberty Financial filed a lawsuit in Florida against Justin Sun, founder of TRON, accusing him of conducting a public campaign aimed at tarnishing the company and weakening its WLFI token. According to Reuters, the company claims that Sun spread false accusations while conducting harmful operations on the token market.
The core of the case is explosive. World Liberty claims that Justin Sun transferred governance-enabled WLFI tokens to Binance. They also accuse him of taking short positions, in a strategy presented as an attempt to pressure the token price.
Justin Sun denies these allegations. He talks about a “baseless publicity stunt” and says he intends to defend himself in court. The tone is clear: neither party is currently seeking a quiet exit. Crypto prefers quick settlements. Here, the case takes a much heavier path.
This new lawsuit doesn’t fall on deaf ears. In April 2026, Justin Sun had already sued World Liberty Financial in California. He accused the company of illegally freezing his WLFI tokens and threatening to destroy them, even though they were in his digital wallet.
Sun claims to have purchased $45 million of WLFI, about 3 billion tokens, before receiving an additional billion after being introduced as an advisor to the project. Reuters then valued his portfolio of 4 billion WLFI at about $320 million.
World Liberty responds that its sales conditions included the possibility to freeze certain tokens. This is where the case becomes broader. If a protocol can block a large investor, even in the name of community protection, the promise of decentralized governance becomes less clear.
The WLFI token is not an ordinary asset. It is linked to a crypto project co-founded by Donald Trump and his son. This political dimension turns every market move into a media event. The conflict with Justin Sun therefore concerns not only a frozen wallet. It also affects the image of an entire ecosystem.
After the announcement of the lawsuit, WLFI rose about 12% over twenty-four hours. But this increase doesn’t tell the whole story. The token was still down about 72% since its public launch on September 1, 2025.
This contradiction sums up the crypto market well. A legal news can cause an immediate rebound. But trust rebuilds more slowly. Investors now look at more than just price. They watch clauses, voting rights, freezes, and hidden powers in smart contracts.
The duel between World Liberty and Justin Sun poses a question simpler than it seems: who really controls a token presented as community-owned? Holders often think they buy economic or political rights. But in many projects, these rights remain limited, conditional, or modifiable.