TLDR
- The post said 600,000 wallets bought the memecoin and later lost $3.87 billion.
- It said 75% of project revenue goes to DT Marks DEFI LLC, described as a Trump family entity.
- The team page listed 12 people, including four Trumps and three Witkoffs, according to the post.
- The post linked Justin Sun, foreign money, pardons, and stablecoin deals to the project.
Questions are growing around World Liberty Financial after a social media post tied it to Trump family interests. The post also raised issues about foreign money and large fee payouts. The account used the name Peter Girnus and described the writer as a Web3 Ambassador. The claims in the post were not independently verified.
Fee split and token structure face scrutiny
The post said World Liberty Financial sends 75 cents of every dollar to DT Marks DEFI LLC. It described that company as a Trump family entity. It said this split appears in the project’s “Gold Paper” on page 14.
The same post said 80% of the memecoin supply went to CIC Digital LLC and Fight Fight Fight LLC. It said the token launched three days before the inauguration. It also claimed the timing kept the product “unrelated” to the president.
The writer said 600,000 wallets bought the memecoin. The post claimed those buyers later lost $3.87 billion. It also said the family collected $350 million in trading fees.
Team ties and foreign money draw attention
The post said the team page listed 12 people. It said four had the Trump name and three had the Witkoff name. The page called them “the passionate minds shaping the future of finance.”
The writer also pointed to foreign money. The post said Justin Sun invested $75 million and later became an adviser. It linked that investment to dropped SEC fraud charges but gave no proof.
Another claim involved Sheikh Tahnoun of Abu Dhabi. The post said he paid $500 million for a 49% stake. It also said that stake was never publicly disclosed.
Pardons and deals add to the pressure
The post also linked the project to pardons and regulatory cases. It named Changpeng Zhao and three BitMEX founders. It said those cases and later business deals were “unrelated.”
It added that a Binance related deal used the project’s stablecoin for a $2 billion settlement. The post did not provide documents for that claim. Still, the allegation added to questions around World Liberty Financial.
The writer also described a May 22 dinner with the “America First president.” The post said 220 attendees paid $148 million in total. It added that more than half were foreign nationals.
Trump family overlap stays central
The post said Barron Trump, 19, held the title “Web3 Ambassador.” It said Donald Trump Jr. dismissed conflict claims as “complete nonsense.” It also mentioned Eric Trump’s Bitcoin mining venture, American Bitcoin.
Another section focused on Executive Order 14233, which created a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. The post argued the order helped lift Bitcoin values. It then tied that move to Trump family crypto holdings.
The post ended by describing a loop of token sales, platform fees, stablecoin deals, and political access. Those claims remain unverified. Even so, the post added pressure on World Liberty Financial over Trump ties, foreign cash, and payouts.





