Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 89 – Crypto wins in Washington with midnight calls, chocolate bars, and a $141 million threat
Episode Date: July 23, 2025Trump stands to profit from a $2 billion bitcoin bet as the crypto industry pushes through bills aimed at bolstering the sector. Originally published on July 23, 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.
Issue 89.
Crypto wins in Washington, with midnight calls, chocolate bars, and a $141 million threat.
Trump stands to profit from a $2 billion Bitcoin bet as the crypto industry pushes through bills
aimed at bolstering the sector.
This issue was originally published on July 23, 2025.
With President Trump's signature, the Genius Act Stablecoin Bill is the first significant U.S. cryptocurrency legislation to become law.
The bill passed the Senate on June 17, the House on July 17, and hit Trump's desk the following day.
During the Crypto-Week Blitz, the House also passed the Clarity Act Market Structure Bill and the anti-CBDCs surveillance.
State Act, two other crypto bills that will now go to the Senate.
Many crypto billionaires who attended the signing had spent millions installing crypto-friendly
lawmakers in Congress and backing Trump last election cycle in hopes of this moment.
Trump thanked them for their campaign support and blasted the Biden administration.
You've come a long way since the Biden administration when they had no idea what you were all
talking about.
and half of you were under arrest for no reason whatsoever.
He later added,
They changed tune, you know, Biden's team, they changed tune right in the middle of the campaign.
All of a sudden, they loved you guys.
They dropped all charges.
Have I got you guys out of so much trouble?
At this point, I should note that I retained Trump's comments about Biden
to avoid taking this statement out of context,
but his claim that Biden dropped all charges,
or even any charges against crypto-executive.
during his or Harris' campaigns is false.
Speaking of the Winklevoss twins, who run the Gemini Crypto Exchange and are among the industry's
big political spenders, Trump said,
"...got plenty of cash, and it's great that you're on our side. You guys are great."
In the White House, the House's crypto week got off to a shaky start with a logjam of
record-breaking duration. Members of the Freedom Caucus, the right-most segment of House Republicans,
blocked procedural votes demanding assurances that the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act would pass.
Republican lawmakers, Trump himself, and the crypto lobby were out in force to push through the vote,
with Trump describing 2 a.m. phone calls to give, quote, a little love to the Republican holdouts.
Crypto companies and advocacy groups spent around $6.9 million on lobbying just in the couple of months,
much of it supporting these bills.
Coinbase spent six figures on a Crypto Week ad blitz targeting members of Congress,
running print ads in the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal, and video ads on social media.
They even tried a gimmick in which they installed chocolate bar vending machines on Capitol Hill,
dispensing custom chocolate bars with labels repeating their own highly dubious poll,
proclaiming that, quote, crypto is like a bar of chocolate.
One in five Americans eat chocolate daily, one in five Americans,
also own crypto. The largest crypto superpack, Fair Shake, strategically picked Crypto Week to
issue a press release, announcing they have $141 million on hand for the midterms, from donors like
Coinbase, Andresen Horowitz, Ripple, and Gemini. This amount is already more than they spent in the
entire 2024 campaign cycle, including funds distributed for spending by related crypto superpacks.
The message was clear, pass our bills or we will spend this money and likely more to come against you in 2026.
After reaching a deal to glue the anti-CBDC bill to the must-pass defense spending bill, the roadblock was cleared and all three crypto bills ultimately pass the house.
The Genius Act passed 308 to 122, clarity passed 294 to 134, and the anti-cbdcdc bill passed 26.
to 192.
Clarity and the anti-CBDC bill will now go to the Senate.
Some reports suggest that the Clarity Act may encounter Democratic resistance due to Trump's
crypto self-enrichment, although similar resistance failed to prevent the Genius Act from
passing the Senate with the support of 18 Democrats.
Others suggest it may stall in a different way, as segments of the crypto industry may push
for a bill that takes a different approach to key portions of the Clarity Act.
such as the classification of blockchains as, quote, mature.
Indeed, several prominent pro-crypto senators have just released a discussion draft for their
own market structure bill.
It defines another category of, quote, ancillary assets, digital assets that are sold,
quote, in connection with the purchase and sale of a security through an arrangement that constitutes
an investment contract in an apparent attempt to capture tokenized equities within the bill's
language. While some describe this as a solution to the Clarity Act's massive loophole for those who wish
to sell stocks without SEC oversight, the current version of the Senate's draft also carps out
ancillary assets from the securities category, and its registration, oversight, and disclosure
requirements are substantially weaker than those of the securities regime. The Genius Act,
already passed by the Senate, quickly went to President Trump's desk. It requires stable-cointed
issuers to fully back their stable coins with dollars, short-term treasuries, and other permissible
liquid, low-risk assets, and to issue regular statements describing their reserve composition.
The bill also lays out requirements for redemption policies, subjects issuers to the Bank Secrecy Act
and its anti-money laundering and sanctions compliance requirements, and defines the regulators
responsible for overseeing stablecoin issuers. Critics of the bill have identified numerous
shortcomings. In a June New York Times op-ed titled The Genius Act will bring economic chaos,
economics and political science professor Barry Eiching Green compared the bill to the free banking era
of the 1800s, where reserve requirements didn't prevent the proliferation of wildcat banks.
Quote, the problems that bedeviled 19th century dollars are likely to be equally debilitating to the
stable coin ecosystem, writes Eiching Green, concerned that accounting firms and regulators will
failed to oversee the upcoming explosion of stable coins, resulting in collapse and significant
economic contagion. Consumer reports criticized the bill for its lack of consumer protections,
noting its limited auditing requirements, lack of redress for losses, and lack of explicit
protections or oversight from consumer protection agencies. They highlight that the bill,
quote, does not clearly apply the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, UDAP provisions, or other core
financial safeguards that protect consumers from fraud, error, or unauthorized transactions.
EFTA is the consumer protection law that gives people some recourse if their Venmo account is hacked
or someone skims their debit card and goes on a shopping spree. Such protections may not apply
to stablecoin transactions and attempts to apply them later would likely meet the same vehement
resistance from the crypto industry as we've seen in the past. UDAP is the unfair, deceptive,
or abusive acts or practices authority, which, if applied to stablecoins, could offer protection
against stable coin issuers imposing hidden fees or deceptively marketing their stable coin,
for example, by comparing stable coins to FDIC insured bank deposits.
Maxine Waters, ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee, penned an op-ed for MSNBC,
warning, quote, the clarity and genius bills wrap themselves in the flag of innovation,
but all they really do is replicate the same mess that led to past financial crises.
They call for few regulations, minimal enforcement, weak consumer protections, and more industry
consolidation. On top of that, these bills have a special intentional wrinkle that makes them
especially dangerous. They would legitimize and legalize the unprecedented crypto corruption by
the president of the United States. Notably, the Genius Act gained support from even the most
wild west of the established stable coin issuers, Tether, whose reserves and stability have long
been a concern within and outside of crypto. In 2021, Tether settled with a New York Attorney General
after an investigation found that Tether, quote, for periods of time, held no reserves to back
tethers in circulation at the rate of $1 for every tether, contrary to its representations,
and had repeatedly issued, quote, self-proclaimed verifications of reserves based on
temporary transfers of funds to accounts under its control. Tether CEO Paulo Arduino, who once
conspicuously avoided travel to the U.S., stood behind Trump amidst other crypto executives and watched
the president sign the Genius Act into law. Nearly simultaneously with the Genius Act signing,
the Financial Times reported that Trump plans to sign an executive order, instructing regulators
to evaluate allowing crypto assets in professionally managed retirement funds.
such as 401ks. This is still very much in the concepts of concepts of a plan stage.
Trump is considering signing an order to instruct regulators to investigate making a change,
but it's a concerning signal of his goals.
The Washington Post did a similar investigation to the one by crew I mentioned last issue,
and found that one in five high-level Trump-appointed officials hold crypto.
Among them is Bill Pulte, who's $1 million,
to $2 million in crypto investments may have influenced his June tweet, directing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
to prepare proposals that would allow the lenders to consider crypto as reserve assets for mortgages.
Trump Business Interests
As always, Trump's enthusiasm for crypto in the White House is easily explained by his personal
investments. His Trump Media and Technology Group, the business behind Truth Social, has just hopped on the trend to become a Bitcoin treasured.
company, acquiring $2 billion of Bitcoin as the asset hits all-time highs.
They got the money from an equity raise and convertible bond sale earlier this year,
raising $2.5 billion in total. With this, the 52% Trump-owned company has become the sixth
largest Bitcoin Treasury company. He has close company in the list. Commerce Secretary Howard
Lutniks, Cantor Fitzgerald, backs 21 capital, the company in third place.
Cantor Fitzgerald also backs Bitcoin's standard treasury in fourth place.
Cantor is helping to bring both companies public via SPAC maneuvering,
with the 21 capital merger announced in April and the latter announced just last week.
Meta Planet in seventh place boasts Eric Trump as a member of its strategic advisory board.
Hutt 8, which recently signed a sweetheart deal with the Trump's son's American Bitcoin is in 11th place.
American Bitcoin is also on the list, much further down.
In courts and criminal investigations.
The trial against Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm has commenced, and it's not going well for the prosecution.
In fact, it's going so badly that I've had to split my coverage of the saga into a whole separate issue,
which you'll receive shortly.
A portion of the October 2023 decision in Bored Apes creator Yugo Labs case against Ryder Rips
and his knock-off board apes project has been reversed by the Ninth Circuit.
and remanded to the lower court for reconsideration.
While the Ninth Circuit affirmed the lower court's decision to summarily reject Rips' counterclaims,
it reversed the decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Yuga Labs on trademark infringement
and cybersquoting claims.
Quote, Yuga did not prove as a matter of law that defendant's actions were likely to cause
consumer confusion, said the appeals court.
And on the cyber squatting claim, quote, did not establish as a matter of law that defendants' domains
were, quote, confusingly similar to Yuga's protected marks.
The 2023 decision resulted in a somewhat unusual outcome,
where Rips and his co-defendant were ordered to pay $1.4 million in disgorgement,
around $200,000 in damages, and a whopping $7.3 million in attorney's fees and costs.
After the court found the defendants had been, quote, obstructive and evasive,
and made, quote, disgraceful and slanderous statements about Yuga, its founders and its
Council throughout the case. The Department of Justice and the CFTC have both shut down their
investigations into Polymarket, a cryptocurrency-based betting platform that surged in popularity in the last
year or so. Last year, investigators began looking into whether American traders were still
placing bets on the platform even after Polymarket agreed to prohibit U.S. betters as part of a
January 2022 CFTC settlement. I could have told you they are, given that calling an
an open secret in the crypto world would be dramatically overstating its status as a secret at all.
But I guess that doesn't matter now that crime is legal.
This is all great news for the Peter Thiel-backed company, which has just announced its $112 million
acquisition of a tiny derivatives exchange called QCX.
While that may seem like a lot to pay for a relatively unknown company, Polymarket is likely
just after QCX's July 9 designation by the CFTC as a designated contract market.
a process that can take years and is necessary for a company like Polymarket to operate in the U.S.
Rather than wait, they've just bought one.
The FBI has closed this investigation into Cracken founder, chairman, and former CEO Jesse Powell.
That was a weird saga all around, stemming not from anything crypto-related,
but rather from allegations that Powell had, quote, hacked and cyberstocked the Verge Center,
a Sacramento-based nonprofit arts charity he founded,
after it kicked him off their board in 2022.
The group justified their decision by saying he wasn't showing up to board meetings
and had violated the group's, quote, guiding principles.
A decision made almost immediately after the New York Times ran a story on how Powell was
spending an awful lot of time in Crackin's Slack channels, starting debates on who's allowed
to use the N-word, sending messages about how, quote, most American ladies have been brainwashed
in modern times, and inviting employees to achieve.
channel called debate pronouns, where he argued against using pronouns besides those based on a
person's assigned sex at birth, and questioned whether people can self-identify as different
races or ethnicities. According to filings in a fraud and defamation lawsuit by Powell against
the nonprofit, the Verge Center claimed that Powell had blocked the group's access to their email,
Slack, and website management platforms after he was ousted, and set up an old domain with a website
imitating the verge centers that still listed Powell as a board member.
Why the FBI got involved in the first place is not and may never be entirely clear.
They do handle cybercrime cases, but generally not ones as seemingly petty as this.
Powell's lawsuit against the nonprofit is ongoing.
SEC. Those hoping to evade securities laws with tokenized equities
may not need to wait for carve-outs from Congress, with Allied Paul at
Atkins serving as SEC chair. Atkins said his staff are considering changes to, quote,
incentivized tokenization within our regulatory framework, including an innovation exception that
would permit novel ways of trading and more narrowly tailored forms of relief to facilitate
the building of other components of a tokenized securities ecosystem.
As Trump said at his recent Genius Act signing ceremony, quote, the crypto guys, they said,
everybody said not only crypto, they all wanted Paul.
for the position. Atkins is certainly making it clear why. The Web 3 is going just great recap.
There were three entries between July 12th and 23rd, averaging 0.3 entries per day. 74.5 million
was added to the Gryft counter. Coin DCX was hacked for 44 million dollars, Big One was hacked for
over 27 million dollars, and Arcadia Finance was exploited for 3.5 million dollars.
read. In an article titled The Struggle Over AI and Journalism is escalating,
Brian Merchant highlights Politico's editorial staff's horror at their management's decision
to roll out an AI tool to summarize news events. It quickly published embarrassing gaffes,
including posts with typos and fabricated quotes, and one parroting J.D. Vance's description
of a, quote, influx of illegal immigrants in violation of Politico's own style guide. The AI summaries
replaced Politico's usual human reporting and seemed to contravene AI-related provisions of a
collective bargaining agreement between Politico's editorial union and management ratified in 2024.
The editorial union, called the Penn Guild, took Politico's management to arbitration earlier this
month, and I wish them success. That's in Brian Merchant's Blood in the Machine newsletter.
The Columbia Journalism Review just ran an excellent story titled How Local Reporters Managed the dangers
of covering extremism. They highlight the local, often indie journalists who cover extremism even at
great personal danger. They all seem to agree. Even with the risk, it's too important not to cover.
Also, quote, a lot of extremism is just political reporting right now. In the news, I joined the BBC's
Business Matters radio program to discuss the recent all-time high Bitcoin price, Congress's
Crypto Week, and the three crypto bills. I come on about 17 minutes in, and it's titled,
U.S. President Donald Trump is very unhappy with Russia. I also tried to help the Observer's
Sense Maker podcast make sense of crypto prediction markets like polymarket, what happens when
a market outcome doesn't match better's expectations, allegations of manipulated market resolutions,
and the regulatory morass around prediction markets. That's in an episode titled
how did Volodymyr Zelensky's choice of clothing spark a $200 million bet and an online rebellion.
CNN cited my comments about the timing of Fairshake's press release to send a message to
Congress members considering the industry's preferred regulation in an article titled
Crypto Week is a turning point, for better or for worse.
And if you've ever found yourself wondering what my cell phone home screen looks like,
and let's be honest, who hasn't? Now's your chance to find out.
I'm featured in the screen share segment of this week's installer newsletter by The Verge,
where I hope I'll convince you to use end-to-end encrypted messaging.
That newsletter is titled The Switch 2's Next Killer App is already here.
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this has been Molly White.
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