Fresh Air - President Trump's Conflicts Of Interest
Episode Date: May 7, 2025New York Times reporter Eric Lipton says the Trump family businesses, including their crypto company, are capitalizing on the President's position, and creating unprecedented conflicts of interest.Lea...rn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for NPR in the following message come from Yarl and Pamela Mohn.
Thanking the people who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.
Us or other means, thank you. Your support means so much to us, now more than ever.
You help make NPR shows freely available to everyone. We're proud to do this work for you
and with you. Okay, let's start the show.
This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross.
Since President Trump has returned to office,
his conflicts of interest have surpassed those of his first term.
He's no longer hesitant about pursuing profits without restraint,
according to my guest, Eric Lipton,
an investigative reporter for the New York Times.
Lipton has written a series of articles about the president's conflicts of interest relating to his family's real
estate and development companies and cryptocurrency company, World Liberty Financial. Lipton writes
that World Liberty Financial has eviscerated the boundary between private enterprise and
government policy in ways without precedent in modern history.
Trump has urged Congress to pass a bill known as the Genus Act, which would make it easier
for U.S. companies to deal in a type of cryptocurrency known as stablecoin.
After advocating for passage of the bill, the Trump family crypto company started issuing
its own stablecoin and became one of the biggest issuers in the
world.
Partly as a result of Lipton and his co-authors reporting, Democrats are now trying to amend
the Genius Act.
I spoke with Eric Lipton yesterday morning about his reporting on Trump's conflicts of
interest.
While we were recording, a Senate subcommittee opened an inquiry into quote Trump crypto
corruption. Hours later, Senate Democrats introduced the end crypto corruption act
which would ban the president, vice president, senior executive branch
officials, members of Congress, and their immediate families from financially
benefiting from issuing, endorsing, or sponsoring crypto assets such as meme coins and stable coins
Both of which we discuss in this interview
Eric Lipton, welcome back to fresh air. Thanks for having me
So you described the crypto legislation before Congress now the genius act as the first formal act by Congress to create a regulatory
System that could help the industry grow. So let's start with what is stablecoin, which is the type of crypto at question here.
Stablecoins are extremely popular in the crypto world and they're a way of
having a type of a token that has a steady value. It's worth a dollar no
matter what is happening in the Bitcoin market up or down because there's so
much volatility in crypto.
And the advantage of a stablecoin is once you have a dollar to dollar crypto token,
you can use it to buy and sell things because it has a reliable value.
So it is also one of the most profitable chunks of the whole crypto space
for companies that issue stablecoins,
because once they have your money in a stablecoin,
they invest your money and they make a lot of yield on it.
And you don't get that yield.
You don't get the interest on your money.
They take it.
And so it's a very profitable part of the business.
But it has been held back because in the United States, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury
have been concerned about, you know, could stable coins represent a threat to the economy?
And so it has not grown as much as it perhaps could if it had some regulatory structure around it and that's what this act would do.
If it's stable at a dollar why not just use a dollar?
Why use crypto if you're just building a crypto that's tied to the dollar?
It's a very good question.
I mean it is more fluid than a dollar and it can cross borders with with fewer restrictions
but that's also one of the concerns is it could be used for money laundering or drug
trafficking if it's not properly regulated.
So how would the Genius Act regulate stablecoin?
The Genius Act would officially recognize stablecoins as a functioning part of the financial
sector and it would create some requirements for
issuers of the stablecoins.
The biggest thing that it would do is it would recognize stablecoins as a legitimate part
of the U.S. financial sector, and it would also be assigned to banks and other financial
institutions that you should start to incorporate them into your mix of services.
So the reason it's so important to the industry is that it would legitimize stablecoins and embrace them through an act of Congress. And so I
think that you would see significant growth in the stablecoin market in the United States
and globally if Congress enacted it.
Well, let's get to the conflict here. So Trump called on Congress to pass this legislation.
Then World Liberty Financial, the Trump family crypto crypto company said it was going to release its own stable coin called
USD1 and
Trump or his family would be profiting from the legislation that he asked Congress to pass
The Trump family company is now one of the biggest issuers of stable coin in the world. So talk about that conflict
issuers of stablecoin in the world. So talk about that conflict. It's a very odd situation because you have simultaneously a president of the United States
who is both appointing the financial regulators, so effectively he's the top financial regulator
in the United States and therefore the world, and he is also one of the biggest players
in the same regulatory space. So he is the regulator and the regulated.
And it is a very unusual situation.
I spoke with both historians and former White House ethics lawyers, and no one could identify
another example of a conflict of interest that was so blatant and worrisome as having
Trump be both the regulator and the regulated in this case.
So you express the concern that the bill lacks strong provisions to stop money laundering
and Democrats in Congress are concerned about that too.
But you know, Trump's Justice Department recently terminated a crypto crimes task force, a task
force that could perhaps have helped, you know, keep on the lookout for money laundering
no longer exists.
Yeah, I mean, this is a single piece of a much broader kind of landscapes of conflicts
of interest when it comes to the Trump family and cryptocurrency.
And among the other examples are the fact that, you know, Trump appointed an acting
director of the SEC and now has appointed a permanent
chair of the SEC who among the first acts was to roll back most of the enforcement actions
that the agency was taking relative to violations of federal securities law and banking secrecy
requirements.
And again, one of the first things that Trump did was to appoint an acting head of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, which is the chief regulator of the cryptocurrency industry, who rolled back dozens of enforcement
actions around the cryptocurrency industry, either froze those actions or actually stopped
pending lawsuits against companies that had violated federal securities laws.
And some of those same companies that have been freed of regulatory actions are actually business partners of World Liberty Financial.
And not only that, but he actually pardoned a gentleman named Arthur Hayes, who is an investor in one of the financial partners of World Liberty.
So, I mean, he has, you know, rolled back regulatory actions relative to his business partners and given a pardon to effectively one of his business partners. So you say that the crypto world's
ultimate goal in Washington is to secure ambitious legislation that would cement
the industry standing in the US financial system and that the crypto
world wants to make the crypto sector part of the larger banking sector. Like
what would that look like if the crypto industry got its way?
Well I mean cryptocurrency has been around for you know quite a while now
and it's largely you know been a way for people to make financial bets that it's
going to rise in value. It hasn't had a great deal of use case. It's like what is
it inherently about? And there's a lot of people in the industry who say
well we want to have a use case
We want it to be used for buying and selling things and for banking you could use it to take out a loan
You could take loan in your crypto
You could you know invest your crypto and earn yield like like you'd put it deposits in the bank and you could do international
Transactions and it has been held up by the lack of a regulatory structure to oversee it
It has been held up by the lack of a regulatory structure to oversee it. And so, you know, this is a moment and Trump embraced the crypto industry unlike any other
presidential candidate in American history because it hasn't been around that long.
And he said, you know, we are going to become the crypto capital of the world.
And the industry pushed in, you know, tens of millions of dollars to help him get elected. And on Monday night at his golf club in New Jersey, President Trump had a dinner that
cost a million and a half dollars to get into that was sponsored by the crypto industry.
And so the crypto industry is quite excited about President Trump.
And the question is whether or not he is going to spoil this moment of opportunity for the
industry because his family is pursuing profits so aggressively that it's creating questions about a conflict of
interest. Trump established a strategic Bitcoin reserve. I don't really
understand what that is. Can you explain it? Yeah, it's effectively, it's a sort of
something similar to Fort Knox. I mean the United States has a place where it
stores gold. It's like a reservoir of gold. The gold used to back up the dollar.
It's just a place that the United States government holds gold. It's like a reservoir of gold. The gold used to back up the dollar.
It's just a place that the United States government holds gold. The idea of a strategic reserve
is that the United States would collect a certain number of cryptocurrency tokens that
are popular in the marketplace and just hold them as a store of value. And just like you
might collect foreign currencies and hold them because you want to invest in other foreign currencies.
So Trump announced earlier this year that he was going to create a strategic reserve
of certain types of cryptocurrency.
And the reason that it became a conflict of interest was that among the cryptocurrencies
he mentioned when he did a social media posting was one called Ether.
And it turns out, of course, that his son's company, which he financially benefits from
personally, World Liberty had purchased tens of millions of dollars worth of Ether before
Trump included that in his social media posting.
And as soon as he said, well, we're going to put Ether into the strategic reserve, Ether
surged in value because, you know, oh, if they're going to put this type of crypto into
the reserve, it must be worth more.
So that was essentially he was basically writing himself a check because of course,
if you're going to mention one particular type of cryptocurrency, it's going to drive
up its price and it did.
Now, Ether has since dropped in value because there's a lot of other things happening in
the global economy.
But at least temporarily, Trump's announcement drove up an asset that his family had already
invested in.
So the Trump family company, World Liberty Financial, their crypto company, does more than stablecoin. We've
talked about the stablecoin. Describe the company to us and the range of things
that they do regarding crypto. So World Liberty was effectively created in, you
know, September, October of last year as the presidential election was coming
towards a close. And it's a brand new company therefore,
I mean relatively speaking,
and its goal is pretty ambitious.
I mean, it wants to be a modern day bank
that offers a range of services.
And it started off by selling tokens
in which you could buy,
it's called a governance token,
and you could buy the right to have some say
in decisions that the company's making.
So before the election, they had a really hard time selling those tokens because it
was started off by Trump's sons and some of their friends who had some experience in the
crypto sector, but there wasn't much motion behind it.
So they only sold tens of millions of dollars in tokens initially.
But once Trump was elected, suddenly, there's the thought, oh, it's going to be the future
president of the United States. This is probably going to do oh, it's going to be the future president of the United States.
This is probably going to do well.
He's going to have the power to influence policy.
And next thing you know, they sell $550 million worth of tokens.
And a large chunk of the revenue from those tokens is supposed to be going to the Trump
family and their business partners.
So their services, their goals are to offer, you know, eventually offer the ability to
deposit your crypto into World Liberty and to borrow money off of it or to earn yield
on it or to, you know, use these what they call the stable coins to buy and sell things.
I mean, it's essentially going to be a modern day bank.
It's going to offer a range of services.
That's their goal.
So far, what they've done is to sell a governance token and a stablecoin.
What does President Trump and his sons, Don Jr. and Eric, have to say about conflicts
of interest regarding the president with this company?
I mean, the White House has said to us the same statement each time we ask about this, that President
Trump has no conflicts of interest because his sons are running this business and that
he has divested of his interest to his sons of his corporations.
He did sign a statement in January of 2017 after his first term started in which he transferred
control of his assets to his sons
And that is true
But the issue is that Trump is still the financial beneficiary of these companies
And so when he files his financial disclosure every year as he's required to do under federal law
We can see that the same entities that are earning revenue from the crypto business or from the hotel business or the golf business or in the many businesses that he's in, that Trump himself is financially benefiting from
them.
Hasn't Trump said that he is immune from conflicts of interest?
I mean, in fact, that is true.
The President of the United States and the Vice President are the only two members of
the executive branch that are exempt from a federal criminal law that makes it a crime
to take an action that brings
you or your family direct financial benefit.
I mean, so that's a criminal offense.
If you do that, if you are an employee of the federal government and you take an action
that specifically benefits your family, that's a federal crime and you could go to jail for
that.
And the president is exempt from that because the president's powers are so broad, I guess
the presumption is that you can't prevent the president from doing
something that might benefit his family financially. But historically, despite
that exemption, presidents from both parties have taken steps to avoid
conflicts of interest by either selling off assets, putting assets into a blind
trust in which they don't have any control or trying to avoid you know their family being involved in financial efforts that
that create obvious conflicts of interest. Now there have been throughout
history relatives of presidents that have drawn attention because of their
business activities. I mean Billy Carter the brother of Jimmy Carter, Neil Bush
the brother of George W Bush, obviously Hunter, the brother of Jimmy Carter, Neil Bush, the brother of George W.
Bush, obviously Hunter Biden, the son of Joe Biden, have been engaged in business activities
that have drawn assertions of conflicts of interest.
And in many cases, they were well substantiated.
But when I speak with various historians who have examined these things, and as a reporter,
I've looked at them myself, I've never seen so many simultaneous
activities as we're seeing now with the Trump sons and the and President Trump himself through his financial benefits
As you know as they're playing out right now before us. So we talked about the Trump family cryptocurrency
Business, let's look at the Trump family real estate business and
Developments it's working on in foreign countries. Last month, Eric Trump visited Gulf states, including
the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, working on real estate developments there. And he
met with Saudi leaders too. So if you could choose one of those real estate developments
that Eric Trump was discussing
and tell us about the potential conflicts you see there.
Yeah, I mean, the thing that really is problematic
is when they are doing deals
that involve government entities.
So for example, they have a business partner in the Middle East called Darglobal and they
now have six ongoing real estate projects with them, most of them in the Middle East.
But Darglobal along with Eric Trump, the president of Darglobal was in Qatar on Wednesday of
last week and there they signed a deal that was financed by the government of Qatar and its sovereign
wealth fund.
And so that effectively means that the government of Qatar and the wealth that it gets from
merely the natural gas and the energy business is backed up the Trump family in a real estate
deal that they're going to do there.
Now I spoke with Eric Trump about this and he says, well, Qatar is helping Dar Global
with the property that it's getting access to and our deal is with Dar Global.
But the bottom line is that they are a part of this deal and that they were there and
an official from the government of Qatar was there during the signing, standing right in
front of Eric Trump.
And to have the family of the president in a business deal with a foreign government
at the same time as President Trump is about to fly over there and do foreign policy matters
with various states in the Middle East, including Qatar, is, you know, well, what are his imperatives
there?
When he makes a foreign policy decision, is he doing it because it's in the interest of the United States or is he doing it because it helps
his business interest in that same country? It's an open question.
Danielle Pletka So what's the importance of American relations
with that state, with that Gulf state? What's its stake in terms of foreign policy?
Richard S. Cotter It's a very small nation. It's a peninsula that sticks out into the Gulf there, but it's a hugely important one.
Very wealthy nation.
There's a large military base.
The United States has more military assets there than just any place else in the Middle
East, also in Bahrain nearby, but that's a very important place for the United States
military.
They also play a critical role as an intermediary between a number of the nations and the tensions that exist in the Middle East between Israel and Iran
and Saudi Arabia and other nations. So there's a huge foreign policy agenda that involves that
country. And so how are the United States foreign policy interests being influenced by the Trump
family's financial interests? Well, let's look at another example of a potential conflict of interest in the Gulf.
World Liberty Financial recently made a deal to take $2 billion worth in cryptocurrency
from an Emirati venture fund that's backed by the government of Abu Dhabi.
This is all a little bit confusing, but very important.
So explain what the potential problem is here.
In this case, as World Liberty is launching its stablecoin,
they overnight become one of the biggest stablecoin issuers
in the world.
And stablecoins are one of the most profitable chunks
of the whole cryptocurrency atmosphere,
because they can take this yield and keep it for themselves.
And the 3% yield that they get
off of investing that stablecoin.
So what happened here is that the government of Abu Dhabi,
which decided from the United Arab Emirates
that they were gonna put money
into another company called Binance.
They decided they were gonna do it through world liberty.
So they were gonna deposit deposit two billion dollars into World
Liberty and that was going to come from this United Arab Emirate Sovereign Wealth
Fund effectively. So I mean again here you now have a Middle Eastern government
that's going to put two billion dollars of its capital into a company that
financially benefits President Trump and his sons at the same time
that the United States has enormous foreign policy matters before the United Arab Emirates
relative to, you know, maybe military sales of weapons, maybe whether or not they get
access to certain advanced American computer chips that they need to develop their artificial
intelligence industry, enormous choices that President Trump has to make.
How are they influenced by the fact that this same government has now put $2 billion into
a company that his family runs and that is going to bring him and his family tens of
millions of dollars in revenues as a result?
It's a kind of a conflict of interest. We really just we have never seen before in probably all of American history, if not at a minimum, modern American history,
that again, he's both the regulator and the commander-in-chief and he is the financial beneficiary of, you know,
trades that are happening that he effectively oversees.
So let's take a break and then we'll talk more. If you're just joining us, my guest is Eric Lipton and he's been writing a series of articles
about President Trump's conflicts of interest.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Terry Gross and this is Fresh Air.
At about the same time that Eric Trump was in the Gulf working on real estate and crypto deals. Don Jr. was in Serbia and Bulgaria working
on real estate deals pertaining to the Trump family company. So let's look at what's happening
in Serbia. I want you to choose one of the projects that Don Jr. was working on there
and talk about potential conflicts. Yeah, Don Jr. is in Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, and in Serbia, for example, at a site that
the United States bombed along with NATO during the war.
On the Indicator from Planet Money podcast, we're here to help you make sense of the
economic news from Trump's tariffs
—
It's called in game theory a trigger strategy, or sometimes called grim trigger, which sort
of has a cowboy-esque ring to it.
— to what exactly a sovereign wealth fund is. For Insight every weekday, listen to NPR's
The Indicator from Planet Money.
Support for NPR and the following message come from Yarol and Pamela Mohn, thanking
the people who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.
During the Balkan War, when Clinton was president, the former Yugoslav Ministry of Defense has
been sitting there as a sort of semi-destroyed structure for decades now.
And the president of Serbia and his administration
have decided that Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law,
should be allowed to build a luxury hotel and apartment
complex on that site, which has sat vacant for decades.
And that site would then have a Trump International
Hotel in Serbia, the first in Europe.
And so at the same time that Eric Trump is in Dubai talking about new hotel and crypto
projects, Don Jr. is in Eastern Europe in the Balkans and he actually has dinner with
the president of Serbia.
And the president of Serbia boasts on a Facebook posting that he's grilling a pig for Don Jr.
for dinner.
And it's that president who has granted this concession to Jared Kushner and the Trump
family to build a Trump International Hotel in Serbia on property that's owned by the
government.
Serbia also has a lot of interest with the United States.
It wants to get into the European Union. And it wants the United States to aggressively push Europe to allow it into the European
Union because it has not yet been allowed and that would improve its economy.
And the president in Serbia also has been facing intense protests in Serbia over issues
relating to his management of the government there.
And Donald Trump Jr.'s presence in Serbia is a sign that he
is supported by the President of the United States and the family of the President.
So the President of Serbia is giving an incredibly valuable concession to the Trump family, and
the Trump family is effectively helping boost his standing in Serbia as he seeks to maintain
control of the country.
Again, that alone would be a headline-grabbing conflict of interest that
would demand newspaper coverage for weeks.
But here we have all of these things simultaneously happening.
It's actually quite difficult to keep up with them all and to try to explain them all to
the public because each one is so complicated, but also represents such a historic level
conflict of interest.
Do you think that's advantageous to the Trump family, that it's complicated and there's Complicated but also represents such a historic level conflict of interest
Do you think that's advantageous to the Trump family that it's complicated and there's so many conflicts. It's hard to keep track I do I think that it is it's it's hard to write about them all it's hard to read about them
it takes a fair amount of energy to simply to keep up and
You you they are they kind of all blur together
And you know, they're happening simultaneously.
Yeah, so I think, I mean, is it by design?
I don't know.
What I think is happening is that they are unleashed
and they sense a moment of opportunity to pursue businesses
that will generate profit for themselves and their family,
and they are aggressively doing that,
and there's no restraint on that pursuit and and so that's that's what's playing out right now.
Okay, I hope I'm not adding to the confusion here, but I'm going to ask you about one other potential conflict and this is in Bulgaria, another country that Don Jr. visited in April.
He appeared on stage with somebody named Anton Trenchev, co-founder of a crypto firm named Nexo. Tell us the story about that.
Though Nexo was targeted by the Securities and Exchange Commission
during the Biden administration for violating federal securities laws and it
paid a large fine and it then withdrew from the American marketplace. So then in
the last you of weeks,
Don Jr. was invited to be the headline speaker
at an event that NexDo was sponsoring there in Bulgaria.
And there on stage was Don Trump Jr.
with a huge portrait of him as he was speaking
and talking about the Trump administration
and US issues
and the crypto business.
And then the co-founder of the company announces,
while Donald Trump Jr. is there,
that they're going to reenter the United States marketplace,
that they've already been having meetings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
and that America has re-embraced crypto
and that we're coming back to America
and we're here with Don Jr. to celebrate
our return to the United States. So he's, and John
Jr. is being paid to be present as they relaunch their crypto business in the
United States and they push out press releases and photos of that event. So
there's the mixing of a financial interest and a regulatory matter and
it's, it's, there's so much happening simultaneously, how do we possibly keep
up with it and explain this all to readers?
So let's get to something else. That's a potential conflict and this is something brand new called executive branch
Which is like a pride. It's a private club in Washington DC
Tell us about this club and what you need to do to become a member of it
So the club was announced a couple of weekends ago.
Donald Jr. was actually in the Balkans and Eastern Europe at the time, giving his paid
speeches and visiting with the Serbian president where they're going to build a hotel.
But while that was underway, back in Washington, he's the part owner of what's called the Executive
Branch, which is going to be a new private club that's opening in Georgetown in an expansive space there for at a club that
recently shut down and in order to be a member of the club there's a five
hundred thousand dollar membership fee and news reporters will not be allowed
in there the public will not be allowed in there but effectively it's going to
become a modern-day Mar-a-Lago like the Trump family have in
You know in Florida or like the Trump Hotel in DC used to be before they sold that after Trump left his first term
Where you know there will be a gathering of Trump family members of their friends including among the other partners are
Don jr's venture capital partners from a company called 1789 and
Don Jr.'s venture capital partners from a company called 1789. And another founding member is Jeff Miller, who's a lobbyist that got more than 35 new
clients since the start of the Trump administration.
He represents an incredible array of regulated industries.
And David Sachs, who is the White House AI and crypto advisor, is also a founding member.
So already you've got a White House
advisor, a lobbyist, the Trump family and Don Jr.'s venture capital business partners
that are helping either found it or own it. And this is going to be a place of confidential
meetings. And now when I spoke with the representatives for Executive Branch and I spoke with a lawyer
and several other folks
that are associated with it about this.
They say that this is a social place for people to gather,
that they will not be disrupted because the Trump people are
often not welcome in a liberal city like DC,
and that all this is about a safe place for people
to gather and relax.
But it also is certainly going to be a place where there will
be influential people who have, you know, unusual
access to Trump affiliates and I have to imagine it's gonna be a lot like the Trump Hotel or
Mar-a-Lago is right now and and Don Jr. owns a chunk of that. Now that Donald Trump,
the president does not actually as far as I know own a stake in in the executive branch,
but his son does and it's gonna be fascinating to watch this place, although we're going to have to
watch from the outside because we aren't going to be let in.
David Sacks, a founding member in executive branch, who I believe is also a crypto advisor
to President Trump, he described this private club executive branch as a place for younger,
hipper, Trump-aligned Republicans together.
And I'm trying to think how many young, hip Republicans have $500,000 to join a private club?
Young? $500,000?
Yeah, I mean, there are a lot of venture capitalist, Silicon Valley types that put large amounts of money
into President Trump's reelection campaign
and many of them associated with the crypto industry that are so anxious to
see him adopt you know this cryptocurrency regulatory environment
that embraces crypto. There are going to be a lot of members from that environment
and David Sachs is sort of the leader of that whole crew. He himself came from the
crypto industry. He was an investor.
So, I mean, I suspect it will be a pretty
crypto-heavy hangout place,
and those folks are quite wealthy.
And, you know, Jeff Miller, one of the lobbyists,
represents a company called Tether.
He was recently hired by Tether.
Tether is the largest stablecoin issuer in the world,
and it's trying to become a bigger player
in the United States marketplace.
So, I mean, all of the things we've been talking about are going to be
playing out inside this clubhouse behind closed doors and you know and then
Donald Trump Jr. is essentially going to be making money off of it. Let me
reintroduce you here. My guest is New York Times investigative reporter Eric
Lipton and he's written a series of articles about President Trump's
conflicts of interest. We'll be right back after a short break. This is fresh
air. So some of the people involved with the Trump family businesses have, shall
we say, interesting backgrounds. For example, Zach Folkman and Chase Hero, two
of the partners in the crypto business World Liberty Financial, the Trump family company.
Tell us about their background.
They are kind of serial entrepreneurs, you might call them.
They have been trying to pursue a bunch of different business interests over quite a
number of years, and they've had a number of unsuccessful efforts.
They tried to start two different crypto companies that one of them was subject to, you know, an appropriate release of some of its funds.
Another one went out of business.
They also were selling everything from a colon cleanser to, you know, a way to meet hot girls,
a website to give, you know, advice for how to meet, quote, hot girls.
And so they were not your usual business partners that you would expect to see the Trump family
align themselves with.
And they got introduced to the Trump family through Steve Witkoff, who is President Trump's
Mideast advisor, who's helping attempt to negotiate peace in the Middle East.
And Steve Witkoff's also trying to work in Russia relative to the war in Ukraine. His son
Alex Witkoff is one of the investors in World Liberty and world and they brought
in Zach Folkman and Chase Hero who are these two individuals who'd had a series
of business efforts that have interesting providence. One of them came
up with a kind of pay-for-play idea. Can you describe that deal? As we were
investigating the startup of World Liberty, we heard from several crypto
companies that Zach Folkman, using the nickname of Z Money was sending signal messages out to cryptocurrency
executives around the world saying that if they would give World Liberty perhaps 15 million dollars
worth of an investment that World Liberty would use its clout and the Trump family name to buy
their token and bring them international attention.
And the executives we spoke with were, in several cases, felt that that was a deceptive
transaction that was making it appear as if the Trump family and World Liberty had independently
decided that it should invest in their token.
And they declined that offer because they felt that it was just the kind of thing that
the cryptocurrency industry should be attempting to avoid in which it's not an arms-lay transaction.
And so that's what we learned that Zach Folkman was doing as World Liberty was trying to raise
money.
And we do know that there were multiple partnerships formed with cryptocurrency companies, but
we spoke with three of them that were offered these kinds of terms and that
turned it down. Yeah because it sounds like we're gonna bring you credibility
with the Trump name and international attention probably would raise the price
of their crypto coin right? It did what in fact once these partnerships were
being announced, there
were short-term spikes in the price of almost all of the companies they invested
in. So they had the ability to drive market decisions by making that
investment and they knew that. So what they were saying is, okay, if you give us
15 million dollars, we'll buy like 12 million dollars of your token and we'll
keep 3 million dollars as part of the deal
Yeah, so it looks like it's a vote of confidence in that other companies crypto, but it's really
In part a way of making money for the Trump family
Crypto. Yeah behind the scenes there was there was money that was being exchanged and there was no public transparency about the financial relationship between the parties
is being exchanged and there was no public transparency about the financial relationship between the parties.
Right.
One other crypto thing I wanna ask you about,
which is using meme coin,
which is basically like a souvenir.
It doesn't have like financial value.
It's more like a collectible than a coin.
Is that fair description?
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, so the Trump family
crypto business used meme coin as a way of
Raising money in return for access to the president. Would you describe that plan? Yes
yet another and in the in the crazy roadmap of things that we're trying we've been trying to examine is that
There are two crypto companies that
the Trump family has started recently.
The second one is selling a meme coin, which is something like a collectible.
It's like a Beanie Baby or a baseball card and you buy it and it has a certain value.
And so the day before Trump was inaugurated, he announced that he was issuing a new meme
coin, dollar sign Trump. And overnight, it became one of the most valuable meme coins
in the world.
And of course, in this case, yet again, the Trump family
owns most of the stockpile of the meme coins
that are being issued there.
And it also is going to make transaction fees off of it.
So every time that meme coin is bought and sold,
it gets a small chunk of money.
And now, in order to continue to drive up the price of that mean coin, President Trump
announced recently they're going to have effectively an auction where whoever owns the most of these
mean coin tokens will have the privilege of having dinner with President Trump at his
golf club in Virginia later this month in May and the
people who among the 220 that have the the people at the top of that list will
actually also get to make a visit to the White House. So I mean again it's like
this is how can you I can't even like imagine that that the President United
States and his family are doing an auction that is now playing out as we sit here to be able to buy
more of their crypto token and to bring money to the Trump family in exchange for getting
access to the president.
So it's for his personal benefit.
It's not a campaign contribution.
It's to personally enrich the family of the president.
That's happening right now.
In addition to all the other things that we've spoken about, that's playing out with the
meme coin and the invitation said that it will be the most exclusive
invitation in the world a chance to have a quote intimate private dinner unquote with Trump at his members only golf club and in
Virginia but is like
Exclusive and intimate private dinner appropriate words to describe a dinner with
220 people?
Yeah, well, that's, I mean, you know, if anything, you know, Donald Trump is an incredible marketer
and brand builder, and he's marketing and brand building, and he's been doing that for
decades now, and that's what he's doing here again. So Trump used his properties, his hotels and Mar-a-Lago, in ways that profited Trump in
his first term, and he's doing that again in the second term. And a good example, which
is something that you wrote about a little earlier, is when the Saudis held their Live Golf Tournament
in the US in Florida. And Live is like the Saudi rival to the PGA, the Professional Golf
Association, which runs this really important tour and championship in the US. So how do Trump properties tie in to the rival Saudi
Liv tour and championship?
So the Liv Golf is backed by the Sovereign Wealth
Fund of Saudi Arabia.
And they've spent an enormous amount of money
trying to create a competitive league to the PGA.
And in the United States, the Trump family
has been one of their most important partners.
And so for the fourth year in a row,
they have had the tournament now at the Trump Doral
in outside of Miami, not far from the Miami airport.
I was there for the tournament this year.
But this is the first time that Trump has been president of the United States
in the White House while there is a Saudi-funded golf tournament at his club in Florida. In the
previous years, he was in the private sector, so whatever, it doesn't really matter. But now,
you have effectively the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund paying money to the Trump family while Trump is president of the United States and the United States has massive foreign
policy interests with the Saudi Arabia. It's thinking about selling them F-35
fighter jets. It's thinking about giving them nuclear technology to help them
build their nuclear industry. And so what I saw when I was down there at Trump
Doral and I there on the golf course was the
governor of the public investment fund of the Saudi Arabia.
He's effectively runs more capital than just about anyplace, anyone else in the world,
you know, hundreds of billions of dollars.
And he is also the head of live golf.
And he was there on the golf course as the tournament was getting started.
And and also and Eric Trump was there as well. Donald Trump
had been there the night before I got there. So it's another conflict of interest. You
have the Saudi Arabia paying money through live golf to the Trump family at the same
time as in the next couple of weeks, President Trump is on his way to Saudi Arabia to talk
about foreign policy matters.
Okay. Time for one more break. Let me reintroduce
you. If you're just joining us, my guest is New York Times investigative reporter Eric
Lipton. He's written a series of articles about President Trump's conflicts of interest.
We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air.
So we've talked about a bunch of conflicts or potential conflicts of interest involving President Trump. And in terms of reaction, Democrats are trying to block a bill pertaining to cryptocurrency
that would stand to benefit the Trump crypto company, the Trump family crypto company.
Do you have any sense of what the democratic strategy is to try to block that bill?
Yeah, I mean, it's something that's just developed in recent days and several of them actually
cited our stories as a factor in it.
That's why I asked.
Yeah.
And so I think that they are demanding that the Republicans give them some concessions.
And I do suspect that there will be a resolution of this and that I know that there are conversations
ongoing right now between Republicans and Democrats in the
Senate to try to see if they can reach a resolution because there's a lot of
Democrats that are supportive of trying to help the cryptocurrency continue
industry continue to mature in the United States and there are I think that
there are there are some Democrats who really want to see the president's
family banned from actually participating in the stablecoin industry I think that there are some Democrats who really want to see the president's family
banned from actually participating in the stablecoin industry.
And that's a bigger ask that I sort of wonder whether or not Republicans, I doubt the Republicans
would agree to that.
There could be some modifications made in the legislation that would tighten language
around anti-money laundering.
That's more likely to occur.
But what's clear is that the Democrats sort of see this as an important moment to pause
and to use the clout that they have because you need at least 60 votes to get something
called cloture to move ahead on debate and to vote on legislation in the Senate.
And they're using that clout to kind of, they see this as a moment of opportunity to raise some of
these issues and to demand potentially some concessions from Republicans.
And that's playing out as we speak.
Do you have any expectations about what the next step is going to be for Democrats pertaining
to the Genius Act?
Well, as we record this right now on Tuesday, the House Financial Services Democrats had
planned to stand up and walk out of a House hearing as a form of protest to go to do their
own hearing in which they're going to open an investigation into Trump's crypto conflicts.
They're so frustrated that there has been so little scrutiny of it They and not and little response from Republicans that they're going to have
You know kind of a show by walking out today and and demanding that this be investigated
So the Democrats clearly have decided that this is an issue they want to engage on and that they want to try to
Elevate the national awareness of this issue and that's happening on a daily basis right
now. So what was your reaction when you found out that Maxine Waters had read
out loud one of your articles about Trump crypto conflicts of interest. She
read it out loud before a House Financial Services Committee hearing. It
was great and of course it's sort of cool to have a member of Congress
read a story that you wrote.
But what was most important to me
is that there be more accountability and transparency.
And I think that happens when people
are aware of what's happening.
And her reading it helps increase the awareness.
And that's really what we're doing here
by writing about these things, is trying
to make the American public and really the world more aware of the conflicts
of interest that we're seeing and that we're trying to document.
Eric Lipton, it's a pleasure to have you back on the show. Thank you so much and thank you
so much for your reporting.
Thank you.
Eric Lipton is an investigative reporter for the New York Times.
While we were recording our interview yesterday morning, a Senate subcommittee opened an inquiry
into quote Trump crypto corruption.
Hours later, Senate Democrats introduced the end crypto corruption act, which would ban
the president, vice president, senior executive branch officials, members of Congress, and their immediate families
from financially benefiting from issuing, endorsing, or sponsoring crypto assets such
as meme coins and stable coins.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, we'll talk about how technology now shapes every aspect of parenting,
from our online identities to the pressures of sharing our lives in real time.
Our guest will be journalist Amanda Hess, author of the new book Second Life,
Having a Child in the Digital Age. I hope you'll join us.
To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews,
follow us on Instagram at NPRFreshAir.
FreshAir's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Ann-Ri Abel Donato,
Lauren Krenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Challener, Susan Yacandy, Anna Bauman,
and Joel Wolfram.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.B. Nesbitt.
Roberta Shorrock directs the show. Our co-host is Tanya.B. Nesbitt. Roberta Shorrock directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross. you you Support for NPR and the following message come from Yarle and Pamela Mohn, thanking
the people who make public radio great every day and also those who listen.