The WLFI vs Justin Sun case is attracting a new wave of attention as a major investor intervened. The Tron founder recently received an offer to settle the dispute behind the scenes, despite the legal tensions that are mounting.
WLFI vs Justin Sun: Sameer Group CEO Proposes To Mediate Solution
Syed Sameer, the founder and CEO of Sameer Group LLC, publicly offered to mediate the situation. Sameer Group owns a large stake in U.S. President Donald Trump’s World Liberty Financial (WLFI). In collaboration with UAE partners, namely Aryam 1 and Aqua 1, the group manages more than $300 million of joint WLFI holdings.
Amid the WLFI vs Justin Sun case, Sameer posted on X that he is “ready and willing to broker a fair resolution.” He also proposed to help the Tron founder to get his tokens unlocked.
He further stated that his partners in the UAE can enable a solution “equitably and quickly” through existing channels. The intention, he pointed out, is to escape a prolonged legal battle between Justin Sun and WLFI.
Sameer also indicated that he was willing to negotiate privately, noting he’s “happy to discuss terms privately.” Further, he shared his email for Sun to reach out for collaboration.
Inside The Lawsuit Against Trump’s WLFI
Justin Sun has just sued WLFI in a federal court in California. He claimed that it was done on the basis of safeguarding his legal rights as a WLFI token holder. In the WLFI vs Justin Sun, he claims that the project team was not justified in limiting his access.
Sun claimed his tokens were “wrongfully” frozen and he was deprived of voting rights on governance proposals. He further alleged that he had been threatened of being burned with his tokens being destroyed forever.
A key area of disagreement in the WLFI vs Justin Sun suit is a WLFI governance proposal revealed on April 15. Sun advised that it may put tokens under lock for the holders who refuse its terms. He noted that he “strongly” opposes the proposal but can’t vote due to reserved voting rights.
Sun has already stated that he had attempted to settle the issue out of court. However, when he was unable to do so, he took the case to court. Previously, he flagged major concerns about WLFI as he exposed the project’s hidden backdoor blacklisting feature.