Justin Sun: Look forward to working with SEC on crypto guidance
TL;DR
Justin Sun settled a securities fraud case with the SEC for $10 million, resolving allegations of wash trades and unregistered securities. The settlement reflects the SEC's shift under Chairman Paul Atkins toward rulemaking over enforcement, amid political and national security concerns.
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Justin Sun: Look forward to working with SEC on crypto guidance
Justin Sun, founder of the Tron Foundation, has settled a long-standing securities fraud case with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for $10 million, marking a resolution to a dispute that began in 2023. The SEC had alleged that Sun and his affiliated entities engaged in over 600,000 wash trades to artificially inflate the trading volume of the TRX token, along with unregistered securities violations. The agency requested a pause in litigation in February 2025 to explore a resolution, and the case was formally terminated on March 5, 2026.
The settlement occurs amid broader shifts in the SEC's approach to crypto enforcement under Chairman Paul Atkins. Under Atkins' leadership, the agency has deprioritized high-profile enforcement actions against major crypto firms—including Binance, Coinbase, and Kraken—that were pursued under former Chair Gary Gensler. Critics, including Democrats on the House Financial Services Committee, have raised concerns that this shift reflects political considerations tied to Sun's connections with the Trump family and his financial support for Trump-aligned ventures, such as World Liberty Financial. Lawmakers also highlighted unresolved questions about Sun's ties to China and potential national security risks.
Atkins has emphasized a focus on aligning SEC regulations with the Clarity Act, a congressional effort to clarify jurisdictional boundaries between the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) in crypto markets. While the Senate's progress on the bill has stalled, the SEC's evolving stance signals a potential pivot toward rulemaking over enforcement. Sun's settlement may now allow him to engage more directly with U.S. regulators as the industry awaits clearer guidelines for compliance.
