- WLF sued Justin Sun in Miami on May 4, 2026, over claims he defamed the Trump-backed crypto venture.
- The WLFI token faced volatility and lows as Sun allegedly moved $300 million to Binance to short the coin.
- Future court dates will address Sun’s April claim that WLF illegally froze $75 million of his holdings.
The Trump family-affiliated World Liberty Financial filed a defamation lawsuit Monday, May 4, against Tron blockchain founder Justin Sun, alleging he engaged in a deliberate campaign to spread false information about the company.
The lawsuit, filed in the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, claims that Sun published defamatory statements to his millions of followers on X. The legal action marks a significant escalation in a public feud between the Trump-backed venture and Sun.
In a statement announcing the lawsuit, World Liberty Financial alleges that Sun engaged in prohibited token transfers, “straw” purchases through third parties, and short selling of the company’s WLFI token. The complaint further asserts that Sun was fully aware of the protocol’s right to freeze user tokens to protect the community and adhere to governing agreements.
“Rather than acting in good faith, Justin Sun chose to defame World Liberty — repeatedly, publicly, and to millions of followers,” Tom Clare, an attorney for World Liberty Financial, said in a statement. “World Liberty filed this lawsuit as a last resort to correct the record and to protect its token holders, its employees, and all its stakeholders.”
The Florida lawsuit follows a separate legal action filed by Sun in April in a San Francisco federal court. In that case, Sun accused World Liberty Financial of illegally freezing approximately $75 million of his WLFI holdings and stripping him of governance rights.
World Liberty Financial’s filing counters those claims, alleging Sun’s exchange wallets moved $300 million to Binance just before WLFI opened for public trading, which the company suggests was part of a broader effort to undermine the platform while benefiting his own financial positions.
The legal battle comes amid heightened scrutiny of the venture. Recent reports indicate the project quietly sold an additional 5.9 billion tokens to private accredited investors while many early retail backers remain unable to trade the majority of their holdings due to lock-up restrictions.
In a terse response to the World Liberty Financial suit, Sun dismissed it as “a baseless PR stunt,” adding that he has a clear conscience and is confident of prevailing in court.
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