World Liberty Financial has filed a defamation lawsuit against prominent blockchain entrepreneur Justin Sun. The action, lodged on May 4 in Florida’s Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, accuses Sun of orchestrating a deliberate campaign of misleading public statements designed to undermine the project’s credibility and depress the value of its native cryptocurrency token.
World Liberty Financial, a so-called decentralized finance platform closely associated with President Donald Trump and his family, had once enjoyed a collaborative relationship with Sun.
The Hong Kong-based founder of the Tron network emerged as an early supporter, committing substantial funds—reports indicate around $45 million to $75 million in WLFI tokens—and even serving in an advisory capacity.
Public endorsements from Sun and Trump family members highlighted shared optimism about the venture’s potential to reshape digital finance.
Yet tensions surfaced after tokens became tradable in September 2025, when certain holdings linked to Sun were restricted under pre-agreed contractual provisions.
Those restrictions formed the core of Sun’s earlier legal challenge. In April, he sued World Liberty Financial, claiming the company had improperly locked his tokens—estimated at roughly 4 billion units—through undisclosed mechanisms that blocked sales and voting rights.
Sun portrayed the moves as unfair and lacking proper governance transparency. World Liberty countered that the freeze authority was clearly outlined in the terms of sale, the token unlock agreement Sun himself signed, and even visible on the blockchain.
The firm maintains it exercised this right to safeguard the broader community following suspected rule violations.
The latest filing alleges that, rather than pursue good-faith dialogue, Sun responded by waging a coordinated online effort to tarnish the project.
According to the complaint, Sun and affiliated entities engaged in unauthorized token transfers, acquired tokens on behalf of third parties through intermediary purchases, and took short positions betting against WLFI’s price.
These actions allegedly coincided with a wave of public posts and statements labeling the platform in damaging terms, disseminated to Sun’s millions of followers on X.
The suit contends Sun knew—or recklessly disregarded—the falsity of his assertions, acting instead to inflict reputational and financial harm while potentially profiting from the resulting market decline.
World Liberty Financial is seeking compensatory and other damages, plus a court-ordered public retraction of the contested statements.
Its legal team describes the lawsuit as a necessary step to defend token holders, employees, and stakeholders after internal efforts to resolve the matter failed.
CEO Zach Witkoff emphasized that Sun’s claims contradicted the agreements he had accepted and the positive stance he had previously expressed.Sun quickly dismissed the new case as a “meritless PR stunt,” reaffirming his position and vowing to prevail in court.
The WLFI token experienced a brief uptick following the announcement, though it remains significantly below its launch levels.
This clash underscores the volatile intersection of large-scale crypto investments, contractual enforcement, and public discourse on social media. As both sides prepare for litigation, the outcome could influence how similar governance disputes are handled in the maturing digital asset industry.