Justin Sun, the founder of the Tron blockchain, filed a federal lawsuit against World Liberty Financial on Tuesday. WLF is the Trump family-backed crypto project, and the suit was filed in California federal court.
The core allegation is that WLF used a hidden smart contract feature to freeze tokens it did not want in circulation, which if proven would undermine the project's decentralization claims.
The Core Claim
Sun says he invested $45 million into WLFI tokens in 2024, partly on the strength of the Trump family association. According to his complaint, WLF turned hostile when he refused to keep investing or to mint the project's USD1 stablecoin on their terms.
Sun alleges WLF added a "blacklisting" function to the WLFI smart contract in August 2025. That function lets the company freeze tokens held in specific wallets, and Sun says WLF used that backdoor to freeze roughly 2.9 billion WLFI tokens belonging to him.
The value hit: at peak, those tokens were worth over $1 billion, but today they are worth about $75 million. The lawsuit also alleges WLF tried to extort Sun into another "hundreds of millions of dollars" investment in USD1.
Sun's Public Position
Despite the suit, Sun said publicly that he remains a supporter of President Trump, which gives the case an unusual political shape. He blamed "certain individuals" for the alleged actions.
Sun added that "I do not believe President Trump would condone these actions if he knew about them," which lets him keep the political door open even as the legal fight plays out.
Why It Matters
This lawsuit is historically unusual, because a crypto billionaire is suing a sitting president's family crypto business. The core allegation also goes directly at whether WLF was ever truly decentralized, which matters far beyond Sun's frozen tokens.
Crypto investors generally assume a token's smart contract is immutable and fair, so a backdoor blacklist that only the issuer controls cuts against that assumption. That could reprice risk across every project with similar admin controls.
The Industry Precedent
Smart contract blacklist functions are legal and often useful for sanctions compliance, but most major projects disclose them clearly in their documentation. Sun's complaint claims WLF did not disclose the function when it was added in August 2025, which is the difference between normal practice and the fraud claim.
If the court rules for Sun, the decision could force crypto projects to list every admin function openly at launch. That would reshape documentation standards across the industry and give investors a clearer view of the true decentralization behind any token.
What to Watch
Politically, the lawsuit turns a pro-crypto White House into a conflict-of-interest story, and it is likely to run as an ongoing thread all year. More investors could come forward with similar complaints, which would push the case from a personal dispute into a class-action-style pattern.
Watch for any SEC or CFTC follow-on action on the blacklisting claims.
