Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 97 – This is hardship
Episode Date: November 20, 2025While slumping prices have some fearing it’s crypto winter again, Trump looks to Saudia Arabia and American retail crypto investors to fund the development of his next hotel. Originally published on... November 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.
Issue 97. This is hardship.
While slumping prices have some fearing its crypto winter again,
Trump looks to Saudi Arabia and American retail crypto investors to fund the development of his next hotel.
This issue was originally published on November 19,
2025. Bitcoin has fallen back below $100,000, wiping out much of these so-called Trump-pump gains over the
past year. After a two-month slide, some fear this is the beginning of another bust in a market
defined by its often catastrophic boom and bust cycles. With heavy leverage across crypto trading
and misconduct that often stays hidden until falling prices apply pressure, collapses can be swift
and brutal, as 2021 to 2022 illustrated. And some traders worry, we're due for a repeat.
On November 3rd, the major DeFi protocol Balancer suffered a $110 million exploit, which also affected
some protocols that reused balancer code. Then a $93 million collapse of the stream finance
yield platform the following day led to $285 million that we know of so far,
in contagion across the crypto ecosystem, including to projects like Elixir's D-U-S-D algorithmic
stablecoin. The aftershocks of these D-Fi failures, combined with faltering crypto prices and
extremely jittery macroeconomic conditions, are already leading to wider fallout.
On November 17, the tracking platform DAPR radar announced it will shut down after seven years,
calling the business, quote, financially unsustainable in the current environment.
The route has dragged down stock prices across crypto firms like Circle, Coinbase, and Gemini.
Shares of digital asset treasury companies, a big trend earlier this year in which publicly traded
firms with core businesses unrelated to crypto, pivoted to amassing large crypto treasuries,
have been sliding for even longer.
Micro Strategy, now just strategy, is down 50% since the summer.
Nakamoto, the Bitcoin Treasury vehicle led by Trump ally David Bailey, has cratered more than 95%
since its August merger with the healthcare company Kindly MD.
It's too soon to tell whether this slide is just the beginning of another crypto-apocalypse
or if it's just routine cryptovolatility.
Either way, I'll be here to chronicle it, except for my scheduled hiatus.
beginning November 26th. If history is any guide, that's exactly when the market will choose chaos.
Trump Business Interests. Newest on President Trump's rapidly expanding list of crypto ventures
is a Trump-branded hotel and resort in the Maldives, which the Trump Organization says will be
financed by tokenizing the project's construction phase on a blockchain and selling the tokens
to U.S. retail investors. The Trump's sons and some of their crypto business
partners have lately been eagerly pitching the idea of new projects involving both real estate
and blockchains, which they present as an opportunity for retail investors, who they claim have
been unfairly excluded from high-risk real estate investments, rather than what it plainly is,
an opportunity for Trump to start bilking everyday people, as well as institutional lenders,
contractors, and laborers. The project is being developed with the Saudi company Darglobal,
continuing the now-familiar pattern of lucrative Trump administration and family deals with Persian Gulf governments and companies.
Congressional and public outcry over apparent corruption and ethics violations involving a $2 billion UAE investment in finance
denominated in the Trump family's stable coin, which would route tens of millions in interest on the reserves to the Trumps,
A White House-brokered AI-chips deal with the UAE, and another White House deal granting the UAE a 15% stake in TikTok,
evidently have not slowed Trump's pursuit of similar arrangements.
Details of the tokenization scheme are scarce.
The Trump Organization has not said whether buyers will receive any share of resort revenues or indeed any benefits at all.
But it's statement that the project, quote, tokenizes the development phase itself,
offering investors the opportunity to participate in a high-growth premium real estate project from inception,
reads like a textbook securities offering under any pre-Trump SEC.
After all, the Howie test, the test to determine if an instrument qualifies as an investment contract under federal securities laws,
involved in 1946 case in which a Florida company developed their orange farming operation
by selling real estate contracts to investors without agricultural knowledge or experience
with a promise that the company would farm the groves and generate profits on investors' behalf.
The Trump organization's announcement came the same day that President Trump announced the U.S. would sell F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia,
after the country's leadership appealed to him personally.
The move angered Israel, given the potential to shift the region's military balance,
and it stoked fears among U.S. military intelligence officials that the UAE would share the technology
with China. The sales will still need to be approved by Congress. The following day, Trump hosted
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the White House. This was the prince's first visit to the United
States since the 2018 assassination of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a frequent
critic of the Saudi government, an advocate for press freedom. The U.S. CIA and Office of the Director
of National Intelligence found that Muhammad had ordered Khashoggi's killing, and Trump himself said at the time
that, quote, if anyone were going to be involved with a plot to kill Khashoggi, it would be Muhammad.
Now, Trump's stance on that, much like his stance on crypto, has taken an abrupt 180.
When ABC News reporter Mary Bruce asked Muhammad about Khashoggi's assassination, Trump quickly interoper
He knew nothing about it. You don't have to embarrass our guest by asking something like that.
Referring to Khashoggi, Trump said, quote, a lot of people didn't like that gentleman that you're
talking about. Whether you like him or didn't like him, things happen. When the same reporter later
asked another question, this time about why Trump is waiting for Congress to vote to release the
Epstein files rather than doing it himself, Trump attacked her as, quote, a terrible reporter and said he
thinks the FCC should revoke ABC's broadcasting license.
In Congress, Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott, the Republican from South Carolina,
has said he thinks he can move market structure legislation out of the Senate agriculture
and banking committees by the end of the year.
Both committees are working on their own drafts, and Scott seems optimistic that the drafts
can go through markup, committee voting, and a merger process to produce a single bill for
consideration by the full Senate in early 2026. That said, Scott's various deadlines for the
crypto market structure bill have repeatedly come and gone, so I don't put much stock in this one.
Earlier this year, Scott was confident that a market structure bill would be finished by the end
of September. He's blamed all delays on Democrats, telling Fox News that, quote,
the Democrats have been stalling and stalling and stalling because they don't want President
Trump to make America the crypto capital of the world.
Senators Warren, the Democrat from Massachusetts, and Reed, the Democrat from Rhode Island,
have sent yet another letter about Trump's crypto entanglements.
The latest, addressed to Treasury Secretary Scott Besant and Attorney General Pam Bondi,
inquires about whether and how they are investigating, quote,
national security risks posed by the U.S. crypto platform World Liberty Financial Incorporated
in light of recent reports that it sold tokens to buyers that conducted business
with North Korean state-sponsored hackers,
sanctioned Russian money laundering entities, and other illicit actors.
They cite a recent report by Watchdog Group Accountable U.S., outlining sales of WLFI
tokens to a user who made substantial deposits with the Iranian Nobatax Exchange,
a user who has been using the Russian rubble-backed A7A5 stable coin, and alleged fraudster
Andre Graachev. Both Nobatax and A7A5 have been heavily linked to sanctions evasion,
and the creators of the A7A5 token have themselves been sanctioned by the U.S.
The report also alleges that World Liberty sold WLFI tokens to a user who transacted
with the North Korea-sponsored and U.S. sanctioned Lazarus Cybercrime Group.
However, this was apparently a false positive,
after accountable U.S.'s researchers mistook transactions with a joke project spoofing a Lazarus wallet
for transactions with a genuine cybercrime group.
Uniswop and OpenC had also previously blocked the user's wallet, suggesting accountable
US may not have been the only group to misidentify the transactions.
In the courts, M.EV Bot Brothers
The prosecution of the two brothers who exploited MEV bots on Ethereum has ended in a mistrial.
Jurors were subjected to a month-long, intensely technical crash course on Ethereum,
maximal extractable value, and the hordes of bots that execute.
automated trades on the network.
Over three days of deliberations, jurors submitted 11 notes to the judge, indicating they were
struggling to reach a verdict.
In the final one, sent on the evening of Friday, November 7th, jurors wrote, quote,
we held another vote, we are no closer to a unanimous decision.
We are under stress.
Yesterday, some cried.
Many have not slept.
This is hardship.
The judge declared a mistrial, seeing no hope that the jury would reach a verdict the
following Monday, and facing the risky possibility of having to proceed with only 11 jurors
due to a scheduling conflict. As crypto advocate near Ajagrawal wrote, quote,
a group of everyday Americans was forced to learn how Ethereum works, and this was the result.
He's right, sometimes that abyss stares back. I originally wondered if the mistrial might
give the prosecutors an easy excuse to drop the case. In addition to being highly technical
and challenging to explain to a jury, there are genuine questions around whether the brothers
were defrauding bot operators who in turn were making automated trades that often disadvantage
humans they're trading against, or if they were simply outtrading those bots in a largely
lawless ecosystem, where it's expected there will be winners and losers.
But the original charges were brought in 2024 by a Biden-era Justice Department from which
Trump's DOJ has been eager to distance itself, particularly when it comes.
to crypto-related cases. An April 2025 memo from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche condemned the
Biden-era DOJ's approach to crypto, deeming it a, quote, reckless strategy of regulation by prosecution,
which was ill-conceived and poorly executed. In the memo, he outlined new DOJ priorities,
aligned with Trump's directive to support the crypto industry, dismantled the national cryptocurrency
enforcement team, and directed the criminal division's market integrity and major frauds
unit to halt cryptocurrency enforcement.
Despite its professed shift, the Trump-era DOJ has been erratic on crypto enforcement.
In statements and in select cases, especially those involving wealthy, well-connected players,
it has appeared lenient.
It dropped an investigation into crypto prediction market platform polymarket.
It's looking to settle a major tax evasion case against Roger Veer, a wealthy crypto investor
who in January published a video plea to Trump for Leopardy.
leniency, complete with waving flags, a dramatized enactment of Veer being arrested, and Veer insisting,
I was born an American, I am an American, and I will die as an American.
Veer renounced his U.S. citizenship in 2014 in hopes of avoiding taxes on his crypto gains,
though he now says it was to escape lawfare from the U.S. government.
The department has also said it won't prosecute developers who write crypto software, quote,
without ill intent, even if they fail to register as money transmitters. And Trump himself rebuked
the Biden-era DOJ by pardoning Binance founder Cheng Peng Zhao, framing the relief for a man alleged to have
deliberately evaded U.S. regulations to profit from American customers as a stand against, quote,
a war on crypto. But simultaneously, the Justice Department has continued to aggressively prosecute
Roman Storm, a developer of the Tornado Cash cryptocurrency mixing software, who received
a mixed verdict in his August trial. The agency recently pursued the maximum sentence against
the developers of Samurai wallet, another crypto mixing service. And now, rather than dropping the
charges, prosecutors have asked for a new trial date to take another swing at convicting the
MEV brothers, who face up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Tornado Cash
The prosecution of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm has been controversial among crypto enthusiasts and
privacy advocates. Initiated under Biden, the Trump DOJ nevertheless took the case to trial,
infuriating those who hoped Trump's crypto pivot would protect those in the space without as
much influence, not just his deep-pocketed benefactors. Prosecutors eeked out a conviction on one charge,
while the jury deadlocked on the two more serious charges. Weeks later, Assistant Attorney General
Matthew Galliotti told a crypto conference that, quote, merely writing code without ill intent,
is not a crime, which some took as a signal the DOJ might retreat from the unpopular case.
Instead, the agency filed a sprawling brief opposing Storm's motion for acquittal,
urging the judge to uphold the one conviction, and insisting that a reasonable jury would have
convicted him on the other two.
Prosecutors haven't yet said whether they'll retry those charges, but the force of their
filing suggests to me that they don't intend to stand down.
Everything else.
Niven Shetty, the former CFO of the Fabric e-commerce platform, has been convicted for stealing
$35 million from Fabric and putting it all into risky defy strategies that evaporated when Terra
collapsed in 2022 and dragged crypto into a death spiral.
Shetty had originally written a low-risk investment policy for Fabric, which dictated that
company funds would be stored only in FDIC-insured bank accounts and low-risk treasuries.
However, shortly after he was told he would be fired from Fabric for poor performance,
Shetty took the money and routed it through his crypto side business,
aiming to capture the DFI projects advertised 20% yields for himself.
His plan apparently did not account for the possibility of a crypto market downturn,
or the possibility that the 20% yields promised by projects like Tara Luna might be unsustainable.
Shetty has been convicted on four counts of wire fraud and faces up to 20 years in prison.
Tectarix, the Justin Sun-linked issuer of the true U.S.D. stable coin, has secured a court order to freeze the more than $450 million in assets it alleges the Dubai-based ARIA commodity finance fund improperly parked in illiquid ventures.
Tectaric says they had agreed that ARIA would invest the assets into trade finance securities,
but alleges that the company instead loaned the money to related counterparties,
who purchased solar and wind operations in Australia, mining operations in Tanzania, and ships.
When TrueUSD needed to access the reserves for stable coin redemptions,
ARIA was unable to provide the cash, having locked the funds in long-term illiquid deals,
rather than the highly liquid investments typical for stable coins that regularly need to meet redemption requests.
Justin's son ultimately issued a loan to Tecterix to cover the shortfall.
In Elections and Political Influence.
The Digital Chamber Crypto Advocacy Group has announced a new project called the State Network,
through which they hope to push for state and local level pro-crypto policies.
While crypto-political spending during the 2024 elections was head,
heavily focused on congressional and presidential races, the state network plans to work to influence
much more local races.
Quote, we want every lawmaker from Congress down to your local school board to be pro-crypto,
said Digital Chamber CEO Cody Carbone.
Someone may wish to break the news to him that school boards don't write laws.
Republican crypto advocate John Deaton is taking another swing in Massachusetts,
despite a near 20-point loss to Senator Elizabeth Warren in 20,
Although a handful of crypto industry executives spoke supportively of Deaton or contributed to his campaign,
the major crypto super PACs stuck to a back-the-winner's strategy and steered clear of his long-shot race.
Now Deaton will challenge three-term Senator Ed Markey and says he hopes this time around he'll earn the backing of crypto's big super PACs.
The Web 3 is going just great recap.
There were two entries between November 8 and November 19, averaging 0.2 entries.
per day. Six million dollars was added to the grift counter. The crypto tracking platform
DAP radar shut down, citing financial woes, and a Cardano holder lost $6 million to slippage.
Worth a read. The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has collaborated with a
broad range of international news publications to publish a multi-part investigation into how
cryptocurrency companies have been profiting from the scams, thefts, and other crimes that are rampant
within crypto. Among its other findings, the report alleges that massive amounts of illicit transactions
flowed into cryptocurrency exchanges like Binance and OKX, even after they were penalized for illicit
activity and ordered to remedy their processes. These reports can be found on the ICIJ website and are
called the coin laundry. Former Bowden College professor Peter Coveyello wrote a fantastic essay
about his experience talking to the New York Times about Zeranam Dani, who he might have taught
while Mamdani was a student there.
It's a little bit about Mamdani and a lot about the New York Times and other mainstream media
outlets framing of articles and rampant both sidesism.
That was in Literary Hub and it's titled,
Maybe Don't Talk to the New York Times about Zoranam Dhani.
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this has been Molly White.
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