Molly White's Citation Needed - As he builds US power, Justin Sun fights to control his story
Episode Date: August 19, 2025A crypto billionaire who once feared arrest in the US is now a Trump business adviser and White House guest. His lawsuit against Bloomberg reveals what he doesn't want Americans to know about his cryp...to fortune. Originallly published on August 19, 2025.
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I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed for the Citation Needed Newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at citation needed. news.
As he builds U.S. power, Justin's son fights to control his story.
A crypto billionaire who once feared arrest in the United States is now a Trump business advisor and White House guest.
His lawsuit against Bloomberg reveals what he doesn't want Americans to know about his crypto fortune.
This issue was originally published on August 19, 2025.
Crypto billionaire Justin Sun has sued Bloomberg for publishing details about his wealth that he himself provided to qualify for their billionaire index.
While Sun was initially eager for Bloomberg to publicize his multi-billionaire status,
he became furious when he learned they planned to publish a rough breakdown of the assets comprising his crypto fortune.
This may be because it reveals an inconvenient detail.
The majority of his assets are TRX, the cryptocurrency issued by his company Tron,
and he owns most of the TRX in circulation, 63%.
This concentration is somewhat reminiscent of the 2022 revelation that Sam Bankman-Fried
had built his crypto empire on a foundation of FTT, the token issued by his own company FTX,
sparking concerns about the solvency of his businesses and the value of FTT that ended in the collapse of both.
Sun's theory could also stem from Bloomberg's reporting that Sun owns the HTX cryptocurrency exchange, renamed from Huobi in late 2023.
Though it has long been clear that Sun holds more control over the exchange than he claims to have as a mere advisor,
he has refused to admit that he owns the company.
This is a pattern with Sun, who has also denied ownership of other companies with which he's heavily involved,
such as Poloniacs, which he later acknowledged owning, Bit Global, and Tectyx.
While Sun claims the lawsuit stems from fears over his privacy, personal safety, and financial security,
these concerns are difficult to reconcile with his frequent public displays of wealth.
Sun instead appears to be continuing his years-long pattern of trying to dictate his
image in the media, downplaying his shady past and attempting to suppress reporting about his
Tron Network's heavy use by criminal enterprises, now with heightened urgency as he works to
reinvent himself for an American audience. Less than a year ago, Sun was a crypto entrepreneur
dogged by SEC fraud allegations, so concerned about a reported criminal investigation into
suspected financial crimes that he refused to step foot in the United States out of fear he would
be arrested. Now he's working to rebrand himself as a legitimate businessman, taking Tron
public in United States markets and securing an advisory role with one of the president's own
crypto ventures. This transformation has been aided by the mysterious easing of his legal troubles,
which coincides with hundreds of millions and investments into Trump-linked businesses.
Sun's wealth. According to Bloomberg, Sun owns more than 60 billion TRX, which at current
prices would be worth $21 billion on paper. With approximately 95 billion TRX in circulation,
Sun controls approximately 63%. Due to the low likelihood that Sun could liquidate a significant
portion of his holdings for anywhere near this amount, Bloomberg applies a massive 75% discount
to the paper valuation of his holdings for their estimate. Because the Tron blockchain
operates on a delegated proof-of-stake consensus mechanism, Sun's subsistinginged.
Substantial holdings do not directly translate to outsized control over network validation as they might in a traditional proof-of-stake network.
However, these holdings do grant Sun power in choosing the delegates who perform validation, giving him substantial, indirect control over the network.
TRX is also the governance token, used for voting in the Tron Dow, the decentralized autonomous organization ostensibly controlling the Tron network.
This means that Sun could unilaterally control the outcome of Dow votes.
A Sun spokesperson did not address a question about Sun's participation in Trondau votes, including the selection of delegates.
Bloomberg also reports Sun holds approximately 17,000 Bitcoin, priced at around $1.9 billion at recent prices,
224,000 Eth, priced at around $850 million, and $700 million worth of the Tether stable coin.
According to Bloomberg, much of Sun's wealth also stems from his 90% ownership stake in the
H.TX cryptocurrency exchange, which Bloomberg also discounts by 50%.
Sun has previously denied that he owns the exchange, and publicly describes himself
as a mere advisor. When reached for comment, a Sun spokesperson didn't address whether Sun
disputes Bloomberg's reporting about his HTX ownership. It's not clear to what extent Bloomberg has
verified the valuation of HTX, which has been alleged by Cryptomedia Outlet Protos to double-count
reserves belonging to other Sun-involved companies, raising solvency concerns.
It's also not clear whether Bloomberg has evaluated whether any of Sun's personal holdings
are simultaneously claimed as assets or reserves for his companies.
In May, when Sun topped the leaderboard of Trump meme coin holders, he registered with a hot
wallet belonging to H.TX. This was extremely unusual, as exchange hot wallets typically contain
pooled funds from many customers. A Sun spokesperson stated that, quote, all Trump token
holdings that qualified Mr. Sun for the gala dinner belong personally to Mr. Sun.
Bloomberg's analysis excludes tokens held on centralized crypto exchanges like HTX or
Binance because his ownership couldn't be verified. This may be why Sun's self-reported
holdings of the Trump-affiliated tokens WLFI and Trump aren't included in the Net Worth Report.
It's also possible that they were excluded because they are comparatively small compared to his
other cryptocurrency holdings. WLFI may also have been excluded because it is not currently
resaleable and doesn't have a clear valuation. Bloomberg does separately mention Sun's
investment into and advisory role with World Liberty Financial in the biography portion of the
billionaires index entry. With 40% of Sun's net worth reportedly denominated in TRX, even at Bloomberg's
heavily discounted estimate, and another 30% attributed to his HTX ownership, also discounted,
it's perhaps more evident why Sun was unhappy to discover that Bloomberg planned to report his
net worth in more detail than just the $12.3 billion top line estimate. While Sun claims the lawsuit
is about protecting his privacy and personal safety, the information he's fighting to suppress
tells a different story. The lawsuit. Sun writes in the lawsuit that a Bloomberg journalist
contacted him to ask if he was interested in being listed in the ranked list of the world's
wealthiest people, but informed him that the publication would need to verify his financial condition.
Sun says that he was interested, but was concerned about confidentiality due to the, quote,
sensitivity of his substantial cryptocurrency holdings. However, he says he ultimately decided to provide
Bloomberg with the information after reviewing similar profiles of other crypto billionaires,
like Binances Chang Pengzhou, Coinbase's Brian Armstrong, and Gemini's Cameron Winklevoss,
which he said provided only broad overviews of their wealth and were based largely on public
disclosures. Sun was horrified, he says, when the journalists came back to him with a draft that
included, quote, specific financial holdings in granular detail, which he says threatens, quote,
significant harm to Sun, included but not limited to an invasion of privacy, and could subject
son to, quote, significant risk of theft, hacking, kidnapping, and bodily harm to him and his family.
Though the lawsuit attaches multiple news reports outlining horrific incidents in which people were
kidnapped, tortured, or violently attacked by thieves who learned they held substantial
crypto wealth, it does not explain how Bloomberg's reporting puts him at any more danger than his own
frequent public displays of wealth already do. A Sun spokesperson did not address a question to this effect.
Sun claims that Bloomberg had agreed to keep confidential the information he shared with them,
and that their draft article and alleged sharing of his wealth valuation with other Bloomberg colleagues
for use in a separate article showed they had brazenly violated the agreement. He also alleged that
their reporting contained significant factual errors to do with his quote personal history and his wealth.
Sun sent a cease and desist to Bloomberg around August 2nd and was informed they still intended to publish.
He then filed the lawsuit on August 11th, charging Bloomberg with public disclosure of private facts
and violation of confidentiality promises.
Although Sun's lawsuit initially sought a temporary restraining order and a permanent injunction to prevent
Bloomberg from publishing his billionaire's index entry and a, quote, unrelated article based on his
disclosures, a short filing by Bloomberg noted that they had published his billionaire's index
profile on August 11, two hours prior to receiving notice from Sun's lawyers that Sun had filed
for the temporary restraining order. It's not clear that the second article written by other
Bloomberg journalists has been published. Sun later withdrew the motion for the TRO and injunction,
though without prejudice for refiling.
The exhibits.
Telegram conversations and email exchanges attached as exhibits in Sun's lawsuit
appear to tell a somewhat different story than the one he laid out in the complaint.
A message from a member of Sun's team on February 28 indicates that a fellow employee named
Timothy, quote, will share with you the documents once he gets the approval from Justin.
Several hours later, Timothy confirms he shared the material with Bloomberg journalist Dylan's
Sloan. Later that evening, Timothy asks about security policies to, quote, prevent data leakage. And
Sloan describes cybersecurity practices and plans to analyze Sun's crypto wealth using the Arkham
cryptocurrency analysis platform. The subsequent week, on March 4th, Sloan provides a more detailed
plan for their Arkham analysis and outlines that they use a custom API. He assures them that,
quote, the file of Justin's wallet addresses won't leave our office. Are you all okay with that plan,
as it relates to data security, he asks. Timothy responds, quote, okay, no problem. Sun himself also responds
okay. Then on March 27, Sun suddenly posts what looks like several paragraphs of a confidentiality
agreement in the telegram chat, a month after his team had already shared his financial information.
Quote, all information shared within the group is strictly confidential and for verification purposes
only. Once the verification is complete, the data must be deleted. The data is solely for verification
and may not be used for any other purpose, including reporting. We will not provide any responses
beyond the verification service, as that falls entirely outside the scope of simply providing data.
This asset data is extremely sensitive. The spreadsheet is for verification purposes only and must not
be used for any other purpose. Any leakage may result in legal liability, and the data must be deleted.
We will not answer any questions regarding these assets.
We only provide data to verify authenticity.
Bloomberg must also agree to use the data strictly in accordance with our requirements,
for example, to provide only a general assessment or overall valuation based on the data,
without making any specific references or detailed reporting on the figures.
This data is being provided solely for verification purposes and is not intended for reporting.
Bloomberg employees don't seem to acknowledge the legalese,
but engage in conversations describing their estimates of Sun's net worth in several partially redacted messages,
and the group discusses estimated publication dates.
The telegram chat turns confrontational in late July,
when Sun's team accuses Bloomberg of breaching ethics by sharing information internally with other reporters,
and violating Sun's privacy with a draft article that includes rough breakdowns of Sun's largest crypto holdings.
Bloomberg's Tom Maloney replies that they had clearly explained their intent,
to publish estimated asset breakdowns during a March meeting with Sun's team.
Quote, nobody at Bloomberg agreed to the terms sent by Justin weeks after the data was shared
with us, Maloney states. Other claims from Sun's employees that Bloomberg's draft contains errors
are followed by apparent refusals by those employees to identify or correct the errors unless
Bloomberg agrees to Sun's belated confidentiality terms, which they do not. Later, a Tron employee
insists that Bloomberg may only publish the total estimate of Sun's wealth, with no additional specifics.
The employee writes, Bloomberg needs Justin's explicit consent to use his personal financial
information, it's his privacy rights in its entirety. Justin never agreed to let Bloomberg
use any of this personal financial information outside of just the wealth verification
and the verification alone. He never consented to and will not consent to Bloomberg
publishing any detail of his personal financial information for reporting purposes,
including any breakdown of this wealth sources, except for the one figure of his total wealth estimate.
Is this clear? I hope we are aligned on this. Once aligned, we can keep working on a revised total
wealth figure and move forward. By sharing part of his personal wealth information, any part of his
personal financial information, Bloomberg is already in breach of his personal privacy rights.
Again, he never consented to you giving his personal financial information to anyone outside of the
wealth team. Your ignoring his request does not grant you the right to use, nor does it waive his
right to his personal data in its entirety. Please confirm that you will not continue to share his
personal financial information outside of the wealth team, and that you will not include any
breakdown of his sources of wealth in his billionaire profile. We are discussing this with you in good
faith, with the intention to continue the efforts on this matter. Thank you. Bloomberg's Tom Maloney
replies, we've always been proceeding on the basis that our valuation would include a breakdown of
major assets in line with our other valuations. We have made that clear in discussions back in March
and again in April. Sun's employee responds, Justin never agreed to that. And Bloomberg's Tom Maloney
replies, and we never agreed to simply do a top line number. The conversations between Justin's
son, his employees, and the journalists reflect eagerness by Sun to provide financial information
that would reflect a generalized dollar estimate of his net worth,
followed by concern and then regret once it became evident
that Sun would not be allowed to dictate the format or contents of Bloomberg's reporting.
In another exchange, Bloomberg's Tom Maloney writes,
we don't want to publish anything that's not correct,
and we'd be happy to take your comments slash feedback on the valuation draft.
An employee of Sun writes,
it's not published incorrect information.
It's that you can't publish this without his authorization.
Bloomberg's Maloney responds,
Why would our valuation require his authorization?
Though Sun and his team have tried to argue that Bloomberg violated previously agreed upon confidentiality terms,
the chat logs appear to show an attempt by Sun to retroactively impose extreme terms on the data they'd already shared,
including that the Bloomberg team could not use the data for any reporting.
An attempt to hold the Bloomberg team to retroactive terms to which they never agreed seems profound.
unlikely to hold up in court. An August 14 filing by Sun withdrew the request for a TRO and injunction,
claiming that the two parties are, quote, engaged in discussions that may moot the emergency
relief originally sought. The Bloomberg profile was updated on August 15th to correct an error
in the size of Sun's tether holdings. Other clarifications were made, but not related to his
finances. Though this correction could bolster some future claim that Bloomberg's original draft was
erroneous, the transcripts showing the Tron team refusing to identify specific statements they believe
to be erroneous, and Bloomberg's apparent willingness to rectify actual errors could weaken a future
defamation claim. A public figure like Sun can typically only prove defamation if he can establish
that Bloomberg was knowingly publishing false statements or statements made with reckless disregard
for the truth. At this stage, Sun has not alleged defamation, though in August 12th statement suggests that
Sun is, quote, prepared to hold Bloomberg fully accountable for knowingly publishing false
information, along with legal threats about Bloomberg's alleged failure to respect Sun's privacy.
When reached for comment with a series of questions, including about the quantity and concentration
of Sun's TRX holdings, a representative responded on August 18th, quote, Bloomberg's reporting
on Mr. Sun was blatantly inaccurate in a number of ways, including but not limited to their claims
regarding the composition of his assets and token portfolio.
This flagrant misrepresentation and Bloomberg's violation of the confidentiality agreement
between Mr. Sun and Bloomberg necessitated the lawsuit by Mr. Sun.
The result has already been efforts by Bloomberg to correct this false information.
In a separate press release issued on August 12th, Sun representatives claim that, quote,
Bloomberg's reporting attributes to Mr. Sun cryptocurrency holdings he has never owned,
controlled, or had any beneficial interest in, and fails to report cryptocurrency holdings he does own.
The assertions made by Bloomberg concerning Mr. Sun's assets are false, materially misleading,
and based on unverified sources.
A pattern of legal threats.
This is only the most recent incident in which Justin Sun has used legal threats to try to shape
media narratives around himself and his companies.
Journalist Ryan Mack has said that Sun threatened to sue him in 2018, after he
published a story at BuzzFeed News, noting that Justin Sun's Tron project had been accused of
plagiarizing sections of its white paper from one published by FileCoin.
Sun blamed the duplications and lack of citations on translation issues.
In 2023, Tron sent a retraction demand to Crypto-publication coin geek over a post that noted,
quote, Justin's Tron blockchain is once again being flagged as terror groups' go-to financing option.
That portion of the Coin Geek post was based on a Wall Street Journal report that Hamas linked money exchanges were, quote, overwhelmingly using the tether stable coin on the Tron blockchain.
Other statements in the Coin Geek piece, challenged by Tron, were direct quotes from a letter sent by the Campaign for Accountability Ethics Watchdog Group to the Senate Banking Committee.
It's not clear if Tron also demanded a takedown from the Wall Street Journal or any other outlets that quoted the journal's reporting.
Neither CoinGeek nor the journal issued a retraction, and it doesn't appear that Tron followed through
on the threats against Coin Geek by filing a lawsuit. In late 2024, Justin Sun and his team demanded
Crypto Media outlet Coin Desk take down an article about Sun's $6.2 million purchase of Comedian,
a conceptual artwork appearing as a banana duct tape to a wall. Shortly after Sun purchased the
artwork, he captured additional headlines by eating the banana,
a press conference in Hong Kong.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Sun's team had objected to the tone of the Coin Desk article,
which described Sun's desire for fame, then ongoing SEC lawsuit, and legal threats against
media outlets, and suggested that his headline-making art purchase could be an attempt
to distract media attention from less flattering coverage.
As I noted in a past issue of citation needed, quote,
the banana stunt was timed right around Sun's first WLFI token purchase,
diverting some press attention from it.
CoinDesk had just been acquired by the crypto exchange Bullish,
and bullish executives reportedly were the ones who ordered the article's deletion.
According to some CoinDesk employees,
bullish executives have been pressuring reporters to avoid critical coverage
or negative opinion pieces about important sponsors of CoinDesk's annual consensus conference,
a major income stream for the struggling media outlet.
Sun's Tron was among them.
Not long after the article was removed, CoinDesk fired its editor-in-chief, Kevin Reynolds,
and deputy editors-in-chief Nick Baker and Mark Hoxstein.
CoinDesk said the firings were a part of a downsizing effort and unrelated to the demand from Sun.
The Trump Connection
Sun's aggressive attempts to fend off critical media coverage mirror the litigation
playbook of his latest business partner and ally,
barred from donating to political campaigns because he's not a U.S. citizen,
Sun has nevertheless joined the deep-pocketed crypto pack in buying favor with President Trump,
out splurging any other single crypto donor by funneling $213 million towards Trump's crypto businesses.
It began in November 2024 with his $30 million purchase of WLFI tokens,
which earned him an advisory position with a token's issuer, the Trump family's World Liberty Financial.
He bought more in January, bringing his total investment in the project to,
$75 million.
He would go on to top the leaderboard at Trump's controversial pay-for-access meme coin
in May by outspending other attendees on the Trump meme coin, and in July he announced
plans to pour another $100 million into that token.
Sun's business and legal future in America brightened substantially after the payments began,
with the February pause of an ongoing SEC lawsuit against him and his company that had
alleged not only unregistered securities sales, but that he had personally directed a wash trading scheme
to inflate the price of Tron's TRX token, a token that we now know forms the majority of his personal
wealth. Sun reportedly once so afraid of a possible warrant for his arrest that he spent years
refusing to set foot in the United States and even forfeited a $28 million trip to space in 2021,
as evidently had those fears assuaged, posting photos of himself touring the White House.
at Trump's personal invitation, he says.
He also cashed in on the spaceflight opportunity,
spending 10 minutes in sub-orbit on an August Blue Origin flight.
In June, Sun announced he would be taking Tron public in the United States
through a reverse merger with a company that previously sold theme park merchandise.
The deal was brokered by Domini Securities,
a small investment firm that had added Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr.
to its advisory board in February.
buying legitimacy. While Sun's lawsuit against Bloomberg may look like just another attempt to
control media coverage, his extreme reaction raises questions as to whether he believes the
reporting could threaten the foundation of his American ambitions. Unlike his history of empty threats
against smaller outlets, Sun actually followed through with legal action against a major publication.
The details he wanted to suppress, likely his overwhelming concentration in TRX,
his ownership of H-TX and the echoes of F-TX should concern Americans,
particularly now that Trump has welcomed him as a business advisor.
Sun's history of secretly concentrating ownership of TRX
to the point that he could control the token's price and governance
and misconduct allegations from regulators
raise alarming questions about his advisory role at Trump's World Liberty Financial project,
which itself issues a WLFI governance token
that will soon become available for trading on the secondary market.
Will investors realize they're trusting someone previously accused of orchestrating wash trading schemes
to artificially inflate token prices?
While the SEC has paused multiple cases against crypto donors since Trump took office,
Sun's case stands out.
Unlike other cases alleging regulatory violations,
his included allegations of outright fraud.
But the concerns extend beyond the SEC's civil complaint.
The reported criminal investigation that suddenly disappeared amid massive contributions to Trump-connected projects
only heightens concerns around his growing influence with the Trump family.
As Sun attempts to bury the details of his wealth and business practices,
Americans should question what other revelations about Trump's crypto partners might be suppressed through legal threats or political payments.
Sun's transformation from persona non-grata to White House VIP sends a clear message.
message. In Trump's America, everything has a price tag.
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