Trump Family’s $400M Crypto Windfall Sparks Political Storm as Lawmakers Press SEC

A $400 million crypto payday linked to the Trump family is at the center of a growing political battle, with lawmakers warning that it could undermine the integrity of U.S. financial regulation.
On April 2, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) sent a joint letter to SEC Acting Chair Mark Uyeda, demanding “all records and communications regarding World Liberty Financial, Inc.,” the crypto firm founded by Trump associates and heavily promoted by President Donald Trump’s family.
In a four-page letter, the top Democrats on the Senate Banking and House Financial Services Committees raised concerns about the Trump family’s financial ties to WLFI, calling it “an unprecedented conflict of interest with the potential to influence the Trump Administration’s oversight—or lack thereof—of the cryptocurrency industry.”
The lawmakers urged the SEC to preserve and provide records dating back to October 15, 2024, when WLFI began offering its $WLFI token through an exempt securities sale that has already raised $550 million. SEC filings and investigations reveal that WLFI is closely tied to Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and Eric Trump through DT Marks DEFI LLC.
The Trump family holds a 75% claim on WLFI token revenue, amounting to an estimated $390 million payout so far, along with a 60% share of future earnings.
SEC’s Crypto Enforcement Shift Under Scrutiny
Warren and Waters also questioned the SEC’s abrupt decision to pause its enforcement case against Tron founder Justin Sun, who invested $75 million in WLFI despite being charged with fraud in 2023.
Under Acting Chair Mark Uyeda, the SEC has shifted toward a more lenient approach, pausing or dropping enforcement actions against major crypto firms, including Coinbase, Kraken, Uniswap Labs, and OpenSea. Concerns over regulatory favoritism escalated when the SEC quietly halted its case against Sun in February.
In their letter, Warren and Waters demanded that the SEC retain all internal records justifying the enforcement pause, including any meetings or communications involving SEC officials, Justin Sun, or the Trump family. They also requested documentation of “communications, suggestions, or directives” from the White House or Trump family regarding WLFI or Sun’s case and asked whether ethics officials were consulted about the Trump family’s crypto investments.
Stablecoin Vote Highlights Partisan Divide
The controversy intensified on Capitol Hill Wednesday, when the House Financial Services Committee passed the STABLE Act—a bill creating a regulatory framework for stablecoins—by a 32–17 vote.
The vote came just days after WLFI announced the launch of its stablecoin, USD1, raising concerns about potential political influence. Democrats pushed for amendments barring the president and top officials from launching financial products while in office, but Republicans rejected them.
Against this backdrop, Warren and Waters concluded their letter bluntly, stating:
“The American people deserve to know whether their financial markets are being regulated impartially or whether regulatory decisions are being made to benefit the President’s family financial interests.”
The SEC has until April 14 to respond, but the broader debate over crypto regulation—now intertwined with allegations of presidential conflicts of interest—continues to escalate.