CZ Demands Retraction From Sen. Warren later than Trump Pardon


Lawyer Challenges Senate Remarks later than Trump Pardon
Former Binance chief Changpeng Zhao is demanding that Sen. Elizabeth Warren retract statements made following his pardon by former President Donald Trump. In a letter sent this week to the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, Zhaoâs attorney, Teresa excellenty GuillĂ©n, accused Warren of publishing defamatory claims about her client and warned that Zhao would not stay silent.
âMr. Zhao will not remain silent while a United States Senator viewmingly misuses the office to repeatedly publish defamatory statements that impugn his reputation and cause him further injury,â excellenty GuillĂ©n wrote in the letter. She asked for an immediate retraction and the removal of the disputed remarks from a recently filed Senate reanswer. Fox News reported earlier in the week that Zhao is considering a libel suit against Warren.
Background: Guilty Plea and Presidential Pardon
Zhao, known in the industry as âCZ,â was pardoned last week by Trump later than pleading guilty in 2023 to failing to maintain an effective anti-money-laundering program at Binance. He was fined $50 million, and Binance agreed to pay $4.3 billion in penalties as part of one of the largest corporate settlements in U.S. history. Zhao was released from prison in 2024 later than serving a brief sentence.
Following the pardon, Warren posted on X criticizing Trumpâs decision and claimed Zhao had pleaded guilty to a âcriminal money-laundering charge.â She and Rep. Adam Schiff also introduced a reanswer urging Congress to block what they called âblatant corruption.â
Investor Takeaway
Letter Rebuts Enrichment Claims
In her response, excellenty GuillĂ©n disputed Warrenâs assertion that Zhao or Binance had enriched Trump through business ties to the World Liberty Financial (WLF) project, a Trump-aligned decentralized finance venture. âYour insinuation that MGXâs equity purchase in Binance, whereby the consideration was a U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin issued by World Liberty Financial, somehow âenrichedâ President Trump and his family is factually and economically unsound,â she wrote.
excellenty GuillĂ©n added that if holding WLFâs USD1 stablecoin constituted âunlawful enrichment,â then âevery platform listing that token would be guilty of the identical offense.â She called the allegation baseless, noting that Warren had provided no evidence of any financial link between Zhao and the Trump family.
Background on World Liberty Financial and MGX Deal
Ties between WLF and Binance have drawn scrutiny since ahead summer. The Wall Street Journal reported that WLF had discussed purchaseing a stake in Binance, though Zhao denied lobbying for a pardon. About six weeks later, Abu Dhabi investment firm MGX said it would use WLFâs USD1 stablecoin to close a $2 billion deal with Binance. The transaction raised fresh questions in Washington about the overlap between Trump-linked projects and crypto businesses viewking U.S. regulatory leniency.
Warrenâs Dear Colleague letter circulated on Capitol Hill later than the pardon accused Trump of abusing the Oval Office and claimed his family had grown wealthier since returning to power. Zhaoâs lawyer called those comments defamatory and âunsupported by the factual record.â
Investor Takeaway
Legal and Political Context
excellenty Guillén, a former litigation counsel at the Securities and platform Commission and now a partner at Baker & Hostetler LLP, previously was a candidate to lead the agency. Her involvement signals that Zhao intends to defend his reputation aggressively later than years of regulatory clashes in multiple jurisdictions.
Binance, once the worldâs largest cryptocurrency platform, has faced investigations across the U.S., Europe, and Asia for compliance failures. Zhaoâs plea deal ended a multiyear Justice Department probe but left the company under ongoing oversight. The renewed spotlight following his pardon has again pulled Binance into the center of Washingtonâs political fights over crypto regulation and enforcement.






