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#JustinSunSuesWorldLibertyFinancial One of the most high-profile lawsuits in the crypto world was filed on April 22, 2026. Justin Sun, the Hong Kong-based billionaire and founder of Tron, sued World Liberty Financial (WLF/WLFI), a DeFi project supported by US President Donald Trump and his sons, in the Federal Court for the Northern District of California.
Summary of the Lawsuit
In his lawsuit, Sun alleges that WLF "illegally froze his tokens, stripped him of his voting rights, and threatened to "burn" his assets. The allegations are grouped under three main legal headings: breach of contract, fraud, and conversion (unlawful appropriation).
Sun acquired approximately 3 billion WLFI tokens in 2024 for $45 million, later receiving another 1 billion tokens as an advisor. The total of 4 billion tokens was worth approximately $320 million in April 2026, according to Reuters.
When the tokens began trading in September 2025, Sun made transfers totaling approximately $9 million. WLF subsequently froze 540 million unlocked and 2.4 billion locked tokens.
During the freeze, Sun's liquid position was over $107 million; by April 2026, the same amount had dropped to $43–60 million.
Sun announced on X that he sought a solution in good faith, but the team "refused to unlock my tokens."
What do the parties say?
Sun's claim:
WLF embedded a "blacklist" function in the smart contract that was not disclosed to investors. This function gives the team the authority to unilaterally freeze any wallet.
He states that he could have earned $276 million if he had sold in September, and therefore he is seeking compensation.
He claims that between April and July 2025, he was pressured to invest $200 million in the USD1 stablecoin and acquire shares in the company.
Despite the lawsuit, they emphasize that they "continue to support President Trump's crypto-friendly vision," highlighting that the problem lies "with some people in the project."
World Liberty Financial's stance:
CEO Zach Witkoff: "The allegations are completely unfounded, and we expect the lawsuit to be dismissed quickly. Sun engaged in misconduct that required intervention to protect users."
Eric Trump, referring to Sun's banana-tape artwork purchased for $6 million in November 2024, taunted on X, "The only thing more ridiculous than this lawsuit is spending $6 million on a banana taped to a wall."
A company spokesperson defended Sun, claiming they were never operational advisors.
Governance crisis and technical dispute
The lawsuit isn't just about money; it concerns WLFI's architecture:
The governance proposal, submitted on April 15, 2026, envisions locking founders' tokens for two years, then releasing them after three years, with a 10% burn upon approval. Those who do not accept will have their tokens locked indefinitely. Sun says he couldn't participate in this vote because his tokens were frozen.
WLF defends the blacklist as a "compliance tool" similar to USDT/USDC, but this defense implies acknowledging that the token is controlled like a centralized stablecoin, not a decentralized one.
Market reaction was swift: After Sun's initial disclosure on April 12, WLFI dropped 15%, hitting a record low, bringing its total loss since August 2025 to 74%.
Social media resonance
The case combined crypto-meme culture with political debate:
The general atmosphere was negative and cynical: posts accusing Sun of being a "naive investor" on one hand, and WLF of acting like a "personal ATM" on the other, opened up a discussion about the contradiction between the promise of decentralization and centralized control.
Why follow it?
The court's initial injunction will show whether freeze powers embedded in smart contracts are valid under US law. WLF is the Trump family's largest source of crypto income (75% of token sales go to the family). The outcome of the lawsuit could affect transparency standards for DeFi projects linked to political figures. Sun had settled his 2023 lawsuit with the SEC for $10 million in March 2025; this new lawsuit could reshape his relationship with US regulators.