Sun Yuchen: WLFI hides a blacklist and a freezing function, treating the community as an ATM

WLFI-2,15%
TRX0,2%
DOLO2,76%

WLFI黑名單凍結功能

Tron founder Justin Sun publicly blasted World Liberty Financial (WLFI) on the X platform on April 12, accusing the crypto project—associated with Donald Trump—of secretly embedding a “blacklist” feature in its smart contracts that can freeze investors’ token ownership rights without prior notice or the provision of any remediation measures, and criticizing the team for “treating the crypto community like a personal ATM.”

Justin Sun’s Accusations: Hidden Backdoor in WLFI Smart Contracts

Justin Sun said in his post that his initial investment in WLFI was based on his belief in its public messaging about decentralized finance (DeFi) and broader retail access, but he later found a freezing function in the contract that had never been disclosed to investors. His personal wallet was blacklisted as early as the project’s launch in 2025. According to analysis by blockchain data firm Bubblemaps, this has already caused losses of more than $80 million.

Justin Sun clearly laid out four major accusations on X:

Hidden Backdoor Control: Secretly implanting the ability to control backdoors for users’ assets without disclosing it to investors

Freezing Funds Without Due Process: Freezing investors’ token ownership rights without disclosing it publicly or under any due governance procedures

Unauthorized Fees: Charging users fees without community authorization

Illegitimate Use of Community Funds: Criticizing that all actions taken by WLFI “have never been authorized by any fair, transparent, or good-faith community governance process”

From the Biggest Supporter to the Strongest Critic

Justin Sun is not a secondary holder of WLFI—he has put at least $75 million into WLFI tokens, making him one of the largest known supporters of the project. For that reason, his public accusations are far more damaging to the project’s reputation than criticisms from typical investors.

WLFI said the reason it marked Justin Sun’s wallet was because it suspected that the address had misappropriated funds belonging to other holders. Justin Sun denied that claim and re-framed the entire matter as specific evidence that WLFI retains centralized control capabilities while packaging them under the “DeFi” brand. He believes this approach directly betrays the core principles of decentralized finance.

WLFI Faces Multiple Pressures

Justin Sun’s public salvo comes as WLFI faces multiple pressures. On-chain data shows that the WLFI team pledged about $400 million worth of WLFI tokens as collateral and borrowed $150 million in stablecoins through a decentralized lending protocol, Dolomite, that has ties to WLFI advisors. This has drawn widespread questions from observers about liquidity risk, conflicts of interest involving related parties, and the liquidation pressure that could result if the token price drops further.

After investors digested the Dolomite loan report, the WLFI token price fell to near its all-time low of around $0.08. WLFI then tried to stabilize the market: on April 11, it announced it had repaid a $25 million loan, stating the loan position was “far from liquidation levels,” and pledged to publish a phased governance unlocking plan for early retail buyers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are Justin Sun’s core accusations against WLFI?

Justin Sun accuses WLFI of hiding a blacklist function in its smart contracts that can freeze investors’ tokens, and that this function was never disclosed to investors. His personal wallet was blacklisted when the project launched in 2025, causing losses of more than $80 million, and he criticized WLFI for packaging the DeFi brand with opaque centralized control.

Why did WLFI put Justin Sun’s wallet on the blacklist?

WLFI said it was because it suspected that Justin Sun’s wallet had misappropriated funds from other holders. Justin Sun denied that claim and characterized it as specific proof that the project preserves centralized control capabilities, rather than a legitimate security measure.

What major risks does WLFI face right now?

In addition to Justin Sun’s public accusations, WLFI also faces: the token price dropping to its historical low of $0.08; liquidity risk from borrowing $150 million in stablecoins through Dolomite using about $400 million worth of WLFI as collateral; and potential issues involving conflicts of interest with related parties. WLFI has started repaying part of the loans and has committed to releasing a governance unlocking plan.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

When DeFi is too slow for young people and too risky for old money: are we all using Treasury bond interest to shoulder junk bond risk?

DeFi once attracted young people with five-figure APY rates, but it is now seen as overpriced and carrying too much risk. Over the past year, more than $1.62 billion has been stolen, and at one point Aave’s interest rate spiked to 12.4%. The fair yield is about 12.55%, with a retail entry threshold of 18%. Institutional players prefer “strategy-isolated vaults” to reduce tail risk. Conclusion: high leverage is no longer in; in the future, we’ll need higher-risk pricing and insurance tools to accommodate both young people and old money.

ChainNewsAbmedia1h ago

Robinhood Warns of Phishing Emails Sent to Some Customers

Gate News message, April 27 — Robinhood alerted users on social media that some customers received fraudulent emails last Sunday evening claiming to be from noreply@robinhood.com with the subject line "Your recent login to Robinhood." The phishing attempt stemmed from misuse of the account

GateNews1h ago

Websea Crypto Exchange Faces Suspected Exit Scam, Withdrawal Channels Closed

Gate News message, April 27 — Crypto trading platform Websea has suspended withdrawals and closed its C2C (peer-to-peer) channels, with multiple users reporting the exchange appears to have conducted an exit scam. The platform initially restricted withdrawals before completely shutting down the C2C

GateNews2h ago

RAVE Token Surges 110x in Two Weeks, Then Crashes 98% Amid Market Manipulation Allegations

Gate News message, April 27 — RAVE, the native token of RaveDAO (a Web3-based cultural community project), skyrocketed 110x in two weeks before plummeting 98% over two days on April 19-20, prompting comparisons to the infamous 2007 Lubo stock manipulation scandal in South Korea. On April 18, RAVE r

GateNews5h ago

Research reveals: Polymarket players take home 30% of profits by winning 3% of the positions—more than 70% of players absorb all losses

A new study analyzes Polymarket’s trading records from 2023–2025 and shows that only 3.14% of experienced winners control more than 30% of the profits. Crowd participation alone is not enough to explain overall accuracy; at the same time, it tracks 1,950 highly suspicious insider trading accounts that, while not driving predictions, amplified price volatility. The case shows that large bets were placed and profits were made before the U.S. announced developments regarding Venezuela. The research questions “wisdom of crowds” and emphasizes the need for increasingly strict regulation.

ChainNewsAbmedia6h ago

France: More than 40 crypto investor kidnappings in 2026, involving leaked tax data

According to Market Forces Africa, reported on April 27, incidents of kidnapping and violent attacks targeting cryptocurrency investors in France have increased sharply. On the X platform, Telegram founder Pavel Durov said that since the beginning of 2026, he has recorded 41 cases of cryptocurrency investor kidnappings, averaging one incident every 2.5 days, and that they are linked to a leak of French tax records.

MarketWhisper6h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments