Tron Founder Justin Sun Files Federal Lawsuit Against World Liberty Financial Over Frozen Tokens
Key Takeaways:
- Justin Sun filed a California federal lawsuit against WLFI on April 22 over $75 million in frozen tokens.
- Sun alleges an undisclosed smart contract function was used to freeze his 2.9 billion WLFI token position.
- World Liberty Financial maintains the token freeze was a routine security measure, not targeted at Sun.
Major Investment Turns Into Federal Dispute
Sun, the founder of the Tron blockchain, first invested $30 million in World Liberty Financial in late 2024, ahead of the WLFI token’s public launch. The investment made him one of the project’s most prominent early backers and led to his appointment as an advisor. As Bitcoin.com News reported at the time, the move was seen as a high-profile endorsement of a project tied directly to Donald Trump’s political brand.
By early 2025, Sun had built his WLFI position to approximately $75 million. The relationship began to unravel in September 2025 when World Liberty Financial froze his wallet, which held 540 million unlocked WLFI tokens and 2.4 billion locked tokens.
Sun alleged that the project had embedded an undisclosed “backdoor blacklisting function” in its smart contracts, a mechanism allowing issuers to freeze or effectively confiscate investor tokens without prior notice. As Bitcoin.com News reported, Sun publicly called the move the opposite of decentralization.
The Complaint and What Sun Is Seeking
The complaint filed April 22 lists multiple causes of action, including breach of contract, fraud in the inducement, conversion, unjust enrichment, and declaratory relief. Sun is asking the court to order World Liberty Financial to unfreeze his tokens immediately, pay damages to be determined at trial, and refrain from burning, destroying, or tampering with his holdings in any form.
Sun announced the filing directly on X, stating: “Today, I filed a lawsuit in California federal court against World Liberty Financial to protect my legal rights as a holder of WLFI tokens. I have always been, and remain, an ardent supporter of the project.”
WLFI’s Position and the Broader Stakes
World Liberty Financial has maintained that the wallet freeze was a routine security measure applied to hundreds of wallets, not a move directed specifically at Sun. The project has not acknowledged any obligation to unfreeze the tokens.
The dispute carries weight beyond Sun’s individual position as World Liberty Financial is among the most prominent crypto ventures tied to the Trump family, and a federal fraud complaint from one of its largest early investors (especially one alleging hidden smart contract vulnerabilities and the potential destruction of holdings) adds serious legal and reputational pressure to that brand.
World Liberty Financial had previously threatened Sun with its own legal action, accusing him of misconduct as the token dispute escalated.

