WLFI NK probe: Democrats target Trump over sanctions
The controversy surrounding Trump’s crypto venture, World Liberty Financial (WLFI), has rapidly escalated into a major political and regulatory flashpoint. Democrats, led by Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jack Reed, are pushing for the Department of Justice and the Treasury Department to investigate whether WLFI sold its tokens to wallets linked to North Korean hackers, Russian sanctions-evaders, an Iranian exchange, and users of Tornado Cash during the period in which it was under U.S. sanctions. Their concern stems from a report by watchdog group Accountable.US, which analyzed blockchain transactions and claimed WLFI’s governance token sale was accessed by dozens of high-risk wallets associated with some of America’s most heavily sanctioned actors. For lawmakers, that isn’t just a crypto compliance issue it’s a national-security alarm bell, especially because entities tied to Donald Trump and his family reportedly receive 75% of WLFI’s token-sale profits and hold tens of billions of WLFI tokens themselves.
WLFI presents itself as a modern crypto-finance platform offering tokens that grant governance rights and participation in a tokenized financial ecosystem. The project has raised hundreds of millions of dollars already, including a significant commitment from a UAE-based investor. But the heart of the criticism is that token sales appear to have flowed to wallets connected directly or indirectly to the Lazarus Group, Russia-linked ruble instruments described as sanctions-evasion tools, and an Iranian exchange flagged in past enforcement actions. While this doesn’t mean WLFI knowingly took money from hostile governments, U.S. sanctions law often operates on strict liability. That means a company can face civil penalties even if it didn’t intend to transact with sanctioned parties, as long as the funds crossing its system are linked to blocked entities.
The senators argue that WLFI’s KYC and AML systems should have prevented such purchases. WLFI, on the other hand, insists it does screen buyers and has frozen hundreds of suspicious accounts, including a large Justin Sun-associated wallet. Critics counter that if WLFI had strong controls, these high-risk transactions wouldn’t have occurred in the first place. The issue becomes even more sensitive because WLFI uses governance tokens meaning buyers don’t just invest; they gain influence. For policymakers, the idea of wallets tied to North Korean hackers or Russian financial networks holding voting rights inside a Trump-affiliated platform raises major red flags. It creates the appearance, fair or not, that foreign adversaries could buy influence however small in a system financially connected to a former president.