Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 92 – The scam of all scams
Episode Date: September 12, 2025The Trumps “debank” major customers from their “anti-debanking” cryptocurrency venture, and a CFTC nominee says the Winklevosses are blackballing him. Originally published on September 12, 202...5.
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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 92. The scam of all scams.
The Trump's debank major customers from their anti-debanking cryptocurrency venture,
and a CFTC nominee says the Winklevosses are blackballing him.
This issue was originally published on September 12, 2025.
The Trump family saw significant financial gains this week as their World Liberty Financial
token began trading on secondary markets and the Trump's son's American Bitcoin stock debuted on
the NASDAQ, though the week brought its share of complications.
Shortly after World Liberty Financial token's trading commenced, the project team made the
surprising decision to blocklist their largest backer, Justin's son, preventing him from selling
his substantial token holdings, a move that may have been motivated by concerns that his actions
were causing the token's price to decline. Additionally, the NASDAQ forced Eric Trump's removal
from the planned board of Alt 5 Sigma, a publicly listed company recently converted into a
WLFI treasury vehicle. After the exchange decided it couldn't abide by that degree of conflict
of interest. The NASDAQ seemed less troubled by similar conflicts arising from other World Liberty
executives who will take positions on Alt 5 Sigma's board as originally planned.
And with Congress back in session, some pro-Crypto Senate Democrats are seeking changes to
industry-written draft market structure legislation, with several senators who previously
supported the Genius Act now pushing for stronger language to prevent presidential conflicts
of interest and ensure more representative SEC and CFTC oversight. It remains to be seen whether these
demands will translate into meaningful opposition or simply become bargaining chips in ongoing negotiations.
Trump Business Interests
WLFI opens for trading.
World Liberty Financial's WLFI token, previously a non-resaleable so-called governance token
available for purchase only by non-U.S. buyers and accredited U.S. investors,
has become available for secondary trading following a July governance vote.
After trading opened, the Wall Street Journal ran the headline, quote,
Trump family amasses $5 billion fortune after crypto launch.
In the article's subtitle and body text, the journal acknowledges that these are merely paper profits,
quietly walking back the misleading headline figure.
Flawed estimates of dollar-denominated windfalls, which ranged from around $4 to $6 billion,
depending on outlet in this case, are a recurring issue in crypto reporting.
As I discussed in my January article, no, Trump didn't make $50 billion from his meme coin.
For one, the Trumps and other members of the project team are not yet permitted to actually sell any of their tokens.
But even if they were, large sales of tokens in low liquidity markets inevitably cause token prices to collapse,
making the price times quantity equation a poor estimate for the dollar value of large holdings.
The Trump family faces even further challenges to cashing out.
Any significant selling of their stash would likely trigger market panic, as investors
rush to interpret what the insider sales signal.
One could reasonably complain that I'm counting the trees while the forest burns on this point.
While I do think it's important not to present misleading numbers, it's inarguable that
the Trumps have profited enormously from World Liberty.
With 75% of WLFI token sale proceeds flowing directly to the Trumps, after an initial $30 million threshold was met, the Trumps profited around $412.5 million from the early token sales.
The token has also served as a mechanism for indirect payments to the president and his family.
Cryptobillionaire Justin Sun's $75 million purchases of WLFI in November 2024 and January 2025 saw 50,
saw $56 million of it flow directly to the Trumps.
Besides that, the family has a massive share of WLFI tokens they will later be allowed to sell,
though not for $5 billion, or potentially borrow against.
And the family maintains an equity stake in the company, giving them a share of all ongoing operations.
One significant revenue stream comes from the U.S.D.1 stable coin,
particularly its use by the Emeraldi firm MGX for an investment into Binance.
This arrangement alone is projected to generate $280 million by the end of Trump's term,
with approximately $168 million of it flowing to the Trump family.
Though undeniably lucrative for insiders, the token launch has not been smooth.
The price dropped almost immediately after the token opened for trading at 28 cents,
following a down-only trajectory to below 17 cents for the two days following the launch.
While early investors who got in at one and a half cents or five cents per token remained comfortably profitable,
retail traders buying early on secondary markets took losses,
as did bullish derivatives traders who saw combined $8.51 million in long positions liquidated.
The World Liberty team rushed to staunch the bleeding by proposing a buyback and burn plan,
a common crypto scheme where projects use protocol fees to purchase their own tokens on the secondary market
and then permanently destroy them, aiming to boost prices through increased demand and reduced supply.
The team began the process, and prices subsequently stabilized at around 20 cents,
still down almost 30% since listing.
Separately, some holders of WLFI tokens fell victim to various scams and hacks,
appearing to target holders around the time of the launch.
In addition to having to navigate the fishing links and social media impersonators who swarmed around the launch,
some buyers saw their wallet strained through a combination of private key leaks and an exploit enabled by a May upgrade to the Ethereum blockchain.
The attack worked in two stages. First, attackers obtained users' private keys through fishing.
Then they essentially inserted a backdoor into the wallets, allowing them to transfer valuable tokens to their own wallets,
including any additional tokens that victims later added to pay for transaction fees.
In a surprising turn of events, World Liberty Financial also blocked Justin Sun, their largest known
investor, from accessing his tokens.
While Sun holds approximately 3 billion WLFI tokens in total, with 595 million of them
unlocked when secondary trading began, the team froze his wallet after he transferred around
55 million tokens, which were priced at roughly $9 million at the time.
They did this using a function in the WLFI Smart contract that allows them to block-list specific
wallet addresses. Such functions don't normally exist on more decentralized cryptocurrencies
like Bitcoin or Ether, but are more common in tokens issued by centralized entities,
who routinely freeze tokens in sanctioned wallets or that are deemed to be associated with thefts or other
illicit activity. San defended his actions, tweeting that he had only, quote, carried out a few
general exchange deposit tests and that, quote, no buying or selling was involved. He insisted his
transfers, quote, could not possibly have any impact on the market, apparently responding to
speculation that he had been selling tokens and thus contributing to WLFI's price decline,
though it remains unclear whether this accusation came from the World Liberty team themselves or from
public speculation. This move by World Liberty Financial stands in stark contrast to the Trump
Sun's frequent complaints about being, quote, debanked by traditional financial institutions who they say
arbitrarily denied them loans and services. The very issue they claim inspired them to create this
project. Sun has publicly appealed to the project team, saying his tokens were, quote,
unreasonably frozen and that he, quote, deserves the same rights as other early buyers.
He wrote, I call on the team to respect these principles, unlock my tokens, and let's move forward
together towards the success of World Liberty Financial.
Perhaps in an attempt to mollify the World Liberty Financial team, Sun tweeted the following day
that he planned to purchase another $10 million dollars in WLFI and $10 million in shares of Alt 5 Sigma,
but as a writing, about a week later, his wallet still has not been unfrozen.
While World Liberty Financial has not directly addressed Sun's case, they published a Twitter threat defending their freeze policy, insisting they, quote, only intervene to protect users never to silence normal activity.
According to the team, they blacklisted 272 wallets, mostly belonging to confirmed fishing victims or at the owner's own request after their addresses were compromised.
The team cited, quote, high-risk exposure for blocking five additional wallets,
and, quote, suspected misappropriation of other holders' funds for one more.
Among these was Bruno Skvorch, a Polygon Developer Relations employee who received a terse email,
quote, thank you for reaching out.
Unfortunately, due to the high-risk blockchain exposure associated with your wallet address,
we will not be able to unlock your tokens.
Using chain analysis tools, Skvorge traced his wallet's alleged red flags,
transactions with a tornado cash mixer, and indirect connections to sanctioned
exchanges Garentex and Nettex 24.
Skivorch wrote, quote,
TLDR is, they stole my money, and because it's the POTUS family, I can't do anything about it.
This is the New Age mafia.
There is no one to complain to, no one to argue with, no one to sue.
It just is.
This is the scam of all scams.
American Bitcoin
In addition to their profits from the WLFI token launch,
Eric and Donald Trump Jr. scored another financial win
this week when American Bitcoin, a cryptocurrency mining venture, went public via a merger with Griffin
Digital Mining. Their roughly 20% ownership stake in the newly public company is valued at approximately
$1.5 billion. This lucrative position stems from what I've previously characterized as a sweetheart
arrangement. The established mining company, Hutt 8, effectively gifted their mining equipment to create
American Bitcoin, while maintaining an 80% ownership stake in the new entity. Without any evidence that
cash traded hands, Hut 8 essentially gave the Trump sons 20% of their operation.
Alt 5 Sigma. When I wrote up the news in August that the Trumps and World Liberty Financial were
creating a WLFI Treasury company with a NASDAQ listed Alt 5 Sigma, I noted, quote,
Alt 5 Sigma will add Eric Trump and World Liberty Financial executive Zach Whitkoff and Zach Folkman to its board.
All three have a financial interest in World Liberty Financial, presenting a blatant conflict of interest in their roles on the Alt 5 board.
Evidently the NASDAQ at least partly agreed because a new Alt 5 Sigma SEC filing has amended their plans to say that, quote,
in order to comply with NASDAQ's listing rules, Eric Trump will now merely be a board observer.
Whitkoff will still join the board, as chair, no less,
Falkman will be an observer and subject to stockholder approval, a director.
Alt-5 Sigma's first action as a company will be to purchase $750 million in WLFI
tokens to create its treasury.
With 75% of WLFI token proceeds going directly to the Trumps, they'll pocket a cool $500
million, essentially through a deal with themselves.
In Congress.
Congress has returned from its summer recess, and we will now likely see Republicans pushing hard to pass a crypto market structure bill as quickly as possible.
Though the House passed its Clarity Act Market Structure Bill in July, the Senate has so far focused on drafting its own legislation.
The Senate Banking Committee published a new draft bill shortly after returning, which, among other things, directs the SEC and CFTC to establish a joint advisory committee on digital assets to,
further the regulatory harmonization of digital asset policy between the two agencies.
The new bill also includes a clause regarding tokenized stocks, apparently aimed at addressing
concerns, including from me, that any securities issuer could enjoy a get-out-of-SEC regulation-free
card merely by issuing their security on-chain. The new draft states,
quote, any instrument that is a security under the securities laws shall not cease to be a security
because that instrument is issued, recorded, represented, or transferred using distributed ledger technology.
Banking Committee ranking member Elizabeth Warren, Democrat from Massachusetts,
issued a statement after the draft was released, saying that the newest proposal, quote,
reportedly reflects secret feedback from industry and other stakeholders that Republicans refuse to
share with committee Democrats or the public.
She has slammed the proposals as, quote, industry written and demanded the Republicans
release the industry feedback that shaped the bill.
The pro-crypto wing of the Senate Democrats has indicated willingness to negotiate a bill,
but suggested they will not sign off on a market structure bill without some conditions.
This is both good and bad for the crypto industry.
On the one hand, they may get a bill through before the midterm elections,
which is priority number one for an industry nervous that the Republican trifecta may not survive past
26 and wants to see a bill signed into law so that the industry's so-called progress cannot be so
easily rolled back. On the other hand, the Democrats are asking for more significant changes
than they demanded in negotiations over the Genius Act, some of which could be stumbling blocks
if the Democrats stick to their guns. These include things like amendments to the draft regulation
to ensure that the SEC and CFTC have the authority and funding to oversee crypto markets
without leaving any assets in a regulatory vacuum
and strengthening consumer protections,
including by preserving state regulatory and CFPB authority.
They also want to see elected officials and their families
prohibited from, quote, issuing, endorsing,
or profiting from digital assets while in office,
and require disclosures from officials who hold digital assets.
They demand that, quote,
commissioners from both parties sit at the SEC and CFTC
to create a quorum for digital asset rulemakings,
seemingly addressing the concern that Trump will leave the CFTC as a one-man agency.
They're wise to include that point about the SEC as well.
While the agency currently has four of its five commissioners,
lone Democrat Caroline Crenshaw's term expired in 2024.
She's allowed to remain in the role for up to 18 months until December 2025,
if no replacement is confirmed.
No nominee has been put forward, and her renomination, by Biden in 2024, was stifed.
by pro-crypto Republicans in December 2024, when they delayed her confirmation vote so that it would
not happen before Biden left office. Democrats passed objections to the Trump family's
crypto self-enrichment, raised during debates over bills like the Genius Act, have yet to seriously
threaten the legislation's passage. However, these past objections were raised most loudly by Democrats
not likely to support the legislation anyway, not from the same Democratic senators who provided
the necessary votes to pass Genius.
This framework was signed by 11 of the 18 Democrats who voted for the Genius Act,
plus Senator Blent Rochester, who supported Genius during the closure stage,
but switched to a no vote on the bill itself.
Seven Democratic senators who voted for Genius did not sign on to this framework.
They were Federman from Pennsylvania, Hassan from New Hampshire, Heinrich from New Mexico,
Assoff from Georgia, Padilla from California, Rosen from Nevada, and Slotkin from Mission
It's certainly possible that some demands will be dropped during negotiations, but this also
strikes me as the strongest pushback we've seen thus far, from the set of pro-Crypto Democrats
who've in the past provided the votes needed to pass the industry's favored legislation.
The letter was published by Ruben Gallego, one of the two Senate Democrats who received
support from the crypto industry's super PACs in 2024.
Both Gallego and Alyssa Slotkin received $10 million in industry backing.
Slotkin did not sign on to this framework.
Other Senate Democrats, such as Kirsten Gillibrand, received contributions from individual
crypto executives, but were not supported by the PACs.
Gillibrand received the most direct support of any Senate Democrats, but at around $100,000,
it was considerably less than the PACs contributed.
Inregulators.
The CFTC has issued a no-action letter with respect to QCX, the tiny derivatives exchange
polymarket acquired in July, to get their hands on its standards.
designated contract markets or DCM license. This essentially gives Polymarket the okay to begin
offering prediction markets in the U.S. Though given how many Americans already trade on the platform,
despite its supposed prohibitions, more than a few people were surprised to learn they even needed
such approval. Prediction markets were once a fairly rare phenomenon in the U.S. or strictly
limited academic exercises, thanks to CFTC oversight that prohibited platforms from offering the types of
sports, elections, and current events contracts that are now popular on platforms like
Kalshi and Polymarket. Now, even the academic exercise, a nonprofit platform called Predict It,
will be expanding its U.S. operations with a recent okay from the CFTC.
Heavy pressure from these platforms in and outside of court, a favorable court ruling, and new
CFTC leadership that thinks these platforms are, quote, an important new frontier, has resulted
in this explosion of places where people can bet, sorry,
trade, on everything from who will win an election or sports game, to what words public officials
will use in speeches, to which countries will airstrike one another. Now, when Treasury Secretary
Scott Bessent threatens to punch federal housing finance agency director Bill Pulte in the face,
speculators can gamble on the likelihood that Bessent actually throws a punch. Traders are
pricing it at around 4%. Welcome to 2025, where not only are cabinet officials threatening to
punch each other, but you can bet on it like it's an MMA fight. A new chair for the CFTC has still
not been confirmed with the Senate in recess, and the conflict over nominee Brian Quintens is
continuing. Setting aside the issues of his questionable emails to the current CFTC commissioners
over their regulation of prediction markets, while he has a conflict of interest as a shareholder
and board member at Kalshie, I've also outlined in past issues how the once-support of Winklevosses
turned against him for seemingly strategy-related differences.
Their opposition has diverged from much of the rest of the crypto industry,
which recently sent a supportive letter urging his confirmation.
The reason for this divergence may have just become clear,
as Quintends himself published July messages from a group chat with the Winklevoss twins,
who pointed him to a furious public letter they had sent to the CFTC Inspector General
in June after reaching a settlement with the agency.
quote, please take a look and let me know your thoughts after you've read our 13-page letter,
wrote Tyler.
Quote, seven years of lawfare trophy hunting.
It's outrageous what they did to us.
Quintense doesn't really push back in the conversation, though he seems to try to delay the
conversation until his confirmation, writing that their complaints, quote, should be
unequivocally left to a fully confirmed chair, but that he, quote, will address this fully
and fairly if and when I am confirmed.
Later, Tyler states that he is, quote, disappointed and surprised that you haven't seen,
heard or read about our complaint yet.
We spoke about this issue when you reached out for our endorsement in December.
Cultural reform, which includes rectifying what happened to us, should be the highest priority.
He demands to know, quote, how you plan to align with President Trump and the administration's
mandate to end the lawfare and make amends for it.
The Winklevosses have previously suggested that they be repaid three times.
their legal costs by the SEC.
It seems that the Winklevosses hoped that Brian Quintens would be their man on the inside
at the CFTC and have now dropped their endorsements after he failed to immediately and enthusiastically
champion their grievances. Along with the messages, Quintenz wrote that he was concerned that
President Trump, quote, might have been misled. He continues, quote, I believe these texts make it
clear what they were after from me and what I refused to promise. It's my understanding that after this
exchange, they contacted the president and asked that my confirmation be paused for reasons other
than what is reflected in these texts.
SEC.
Both the CFTC and the SEC have been full steam ahead on their, quote, crypto sprints, and
roughly half of the items on the SEC's rulemaking agenda are proposals to loosen regulations
on the industry.
Quote, this regulatory agenda reflects that it is a new day at the Securities and Exchange
Commission, announced Chairman Paul Atkins.
Meanwhile, the SEC has also announced that text messages sent and received by former chairman
Gary Gensler between October 2022 and September 2023 had been permanently deleted after a, quote,
poorly understood and automated policy that caused an enterprise wipe of Gensler's government
issued mobile device in August 23.
I imagine this must be rather infuriating news for the dozens of companies that have paid
tens of millions of dollars apiece in fines to the SEC over record-keeping failures.
Many in the crypto world have accused Gensler or his SEC of intentionally deleting the messages
to hide something, including pro-crypto Representative Tom Emmer, a Republican from Minnesota,
who called the deletions, quote, just another example of the less than honest behavior that
marked the Biden administration.
In Elections and Political Influence
Virginia Democrat James Walkenshaw has been elected to the House.
to fill the seat vacated by Representative Jerry Connolly, who died in office in May 2025.
Walkinshaw received just over $1 million in support from the cryptocurrency industry,
and his comments about, quote, embracing the next generation of technologies such as
blockchains diverge from his predecessor's staunch opposition to crypto.
Protect Progress, the cryptocurrency-focused super PAC that backed him,
was the largest outside spender in the race.
In the Courts.
Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Brian Schwalb, has announced a lawsuit against
crypto ATM operator Athena Bitcoin. Quote, Athena knows its fraud protections do not work,
claimed Schwab, outlining how scammers routinely convince elderly victims to use the machines
to transfer money to the scammer's cryptocurrency wallets. Adding insult to injury,
Athena also charges massive hidden fees, up to 26% per transaction, on their transfers.
In one scam, identified by the Attorney General's office, a victim lost $10,000.
About 7,500 of it went to the scammers, and the remaining 25% went to Athena.
According to an FBI report on 2024 internet crime, they received almost 11,000 complaints
about fraud involving cryptocurrency ATMs or kiosks, a 99% increase from the prior year.
Altogether, almost $250 million was reported lost to such scams.
with $107 million of that coming from victims in the over-60 age group.
Ryan Salem, who started his lengthy prison sentence back in October of last year,
is facing even more trouble.
The FTX estate has filed a lawsuit against both Salem and his wife, Michelle Bond,
alleging that they transferred money and cryptocurrency assets from his accounts to hers
shortly after FTX's collapse, but prior to asset freezes.
They also claim that he purchased and transferred ownership of a $4 million property to bond,
which plaintiffs also allege was an attempt to shield it from recovery by the FTX debtors.
Two former executives of the CRED cryptocurrency lending service have each been sentenced to more than
three years in prison for their role in the fraud that ultimately ended with the 2020 collapse of their company.
CEO and co-founder Daniel Schatt and CFO Joseph Padulka claimed to their customers that they
engaged in only, quote, collateralized or guaranteed lending, hedged their investments, and held,
quote, comprehensive insurance. In reality, they were hiding that, quote, virtually all the assets
to pay the yield were generated by a single company whose business was to make unsecured microloans
to Chinese gamers, and that they had none of the hedges or insurance they claimed. Around $150 million
was lost, based on prices at the time, though based on current crypto prices, the estimate is
much larger. Chat will spend 52 months or 4.3 years in prison, Paducla will serve three years.
Crypto kidnapping continues to be a major issue in France, where police have just arrested seven people
and rescued a 20-year-old Swiss man who had been kidnapped and held hostage for several days
as his captors demanded a ransom. The web three is going just great recap. There were five entries
between August 28 and September 11, averaging 0.3 entries per day.
$55.8 million was added to the Grift counter.
$41.5 million was stolen from Swissborg in a kiln API exploit.
A massive NPM supply chain attack put crypto transactions at risk.
The Nemo Protocol was exploited for $2.4 million.
A Venus Protocol user was exploited by $13.5 million, although most of the funds were later recovered.
and the Bunny decentralized exchange was exploited for $8.4 million.
Worth a read.
A lot of journalists really struggle to accurately cover Wikipedia,
but Josh Jeze did an incredibly good job of it in this very long read in The Verge.
It's titled, Wikipedia is under attack and how it can survive.
In the wake of another First Amendment violating demand from Congress,
he outlines how Wikipedia's editing community works,
the project's strengths and weaknesses,
and the threats it faces.
Parker Malloy wrote up a story in the present age
about CBS News installing the bias ombudsman
they promised to hire in order to get their merger approved.
You won't be shocked to learn it's a Trump lackey.
And that's the way it is.
According to the Trump, Ministry of Truth.
In the news, I went back on the majority report
with Emma Vigelin to talk about how Trump is profiting
from the cryptocurrency industry
while simultaneously demolishing regulations.
We also talked about prediction markets and the crypto industry's influence in the upcoming midterms.
That's their September 4th episode, or you can find the clip titled Trump Family's Crypto Cash in.
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this is Ben, Molly White.
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