EXCLUSIVE: $300M WLFI Investor Breaks Silence on Justin Sun Lawsuit

WLFI Price In Trouble as Whale Activity Spikes Is More Downside Ahead

The post EXCLUSIVE: $300M WLFI Investor Breaks Silence on Justin Sun Lawsuit appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

As Justin Sun’s lawsuit against World Liberty Financial moves through California federal court, an institutional investor in the Trump-backed platform has broken his silence and given Coinpedia the most detailed account yet of what WLFI says actually happened.

Syed Sameer, CEO of Sameer Group LLC, holds a significant stake in WLFI alongside UAE partners Aryam 1 and Aqua 1, a combined bloc of over $300 million.

Other Institutions Respected Their Lockups

“WLFI says other institutions respected their lockups,” Sameer told Coinpedia. “This arrangement was only granted to him based on that commitment.”

The issue started with an agreement made before the project launched. Sun was given something other investors did not get: early access to his tokens, sent directly to his wallet. According to Sameer, WLFI says the condition was simple — the tokens had to stay locked for one year, with no selling, transfers, or any actions that could hurt the project.

According to WLFI, what happened next broke that agreement. The company claims Sun promoted a 20% staking return for WLFI through Huobi channels, encouraging users to deposit tokens into exchange-linked wallets. WLFI further alleges that those tokens were later moved to other platforms, including Binance.

WLFI then made an even more serious allegation. According to the platform, just before launch, those tokens were used to sell WLFI tokens while a large short bet was opened against the project at the same time. WLFI describes it as a coordinated “dump-and-short” and says the evidence can be seen on-chain.

“This is also an allegation made by many people on X and other channels,” Sameer noted, “as well as a similar track record which he is infamous for.”

Why the Tokens Were Frozen

“WLFI says that is why it moved to lock the tokens in his wallet — not as an arbitrary action, but as a response to what it considered a breach of the original agreement.”

The freeze, Sameer was clear, was not arbitrary.

What is less widely known, according to Sameer, is that WLFI initially chose to stay quiet. The platform did not publicly share its allegations right away, as it wanted to avoid turning a private dispute into a public fight. Sameer says WLFI only responded on X after Sun started publicly challenging its version of events.

By then, the dispute had already spilled into public view. Sun had criticised a March governance vote, calling it rigged, with over 76% of participating tokens coming from just ten wallets. WLFI had fired back, calling Sun’s allegations baseless.

The lawsuit was the next step.

Litigation Will Not Work Out in Justin Sun’s Favor

“It is my personal view that litigation will not work out in Justin Sun’s favor,” he told Coinpedia. “Based on what I know, I believe that WLF will win that case, and it will also only further damage Justin Sun’s relationship and credibility with the WLF team, and even beyond.”

Sameer was candid about why he stepped forward and frank about what he thinks happens if Sun stays the course in court.

On Investor Rights

“As a major institutional investor, I strongly believe every token holder should be treated fairly and in accordance with the spirit of the original investment terms and blockchain principles of transparency,” he said. “However, I am not a lawyer and will not speculate on the legal merits of either side’s position. That is ultimately a matter for the courts or a negotiated settlement.”

Coinpedia also asked Sameer: Does he believe the token freeze violated Sun’s rights as an investor?

His focus is on finding a practical path forward, one that protects value for all stakeholders, not just the two parties in dispute.

Source: https://coinpedia.org/news/exclusive-300m-wlfi-investor-breaks-silence-on-justin-sun-lawsuit/