Impersonators Take Advantage as the Trumps Delay Crypto Reveal
The Trump family has spent the past month hyping an upcoming crypto venture. In the absence of hard details about the project, scammers are filling in the blanks….
Impersonators have descended on a soon-to-be-announced crypto venture tied to presidential candidate Donald Trump and his family, capitalizing on gaps in information about the project to promote inauthentic crypto tokens.
Led by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., the sons of the former president, the Trumps have embarked on a campaign to promote an upcoming projectâcalled World Liberty Financialâon social media. For the best part of a month, the family has teased the launch in cryptic posts that offer little detail.
In an X post on August 6, Eric wrote that he had âtruly fallen in love with crypto.â The following day, in another post, Donald Jr. said he was âabout to shake up the crypto worldâ and warned his followers not to âget left behind.â On August 22, in a post on Truth Social, the former president himself promoted the venture: âFor too long, the average American has been squeezed by the big banks and financial elites. Itâs time we take a standâtogether,â wrote Trump.
But the family is yet to provide first-hand details about the purpose or functionality of World Liberty Financial. And third-party operators are taking advantage of the information vacuum.
In late August, an advertisement appeared at the bottom of the projectâs Telegram channelâwhich has been pitched by the Trump family as âthe ONLY [sic] place to get the official newsââpromoting an inauthentic crypto token giveaway. The ad, which is still live at the time of writing, leads to an external webpage featuring an illustration of Donald Trump pulling apart his shirt at the buttons to reveal a Superman-style costume beneath with a âTâ logo. Visitors are promised up to $15,000 in crypto tokens and invited to âconnect now your wallet [sic] and make the world great again.â
On August 29, a post to the Telegram channel for World Liberty Financial warned subscribersâof which there are now more than 200,000âaway from the ad. âWe have been made aware of some ads circulating on Telegram claiming to be from us, offering fake airdrops or token sales,â read the post. âWe are NOT doing any airdrops or selling any tokens at this time.â But a week later, the ad remains in place, and as many as 50,000 people have subscribed to the competing Telegram channel associated with it. It is not clear how much money, if any, has been taken.
Eric Trump did not respond to questions about the inability to prevent inauthentic ads from being served through the World Liberty Financial Telegram channel. Telegram did not respond to a request for comment.
On September 3, X accounts belonging to Lara Trump, wife to Eric, and Tiffany Trump, daughter of the former president, were allegedly compromised and used by the hackers to peddle another crypto token purportedly related to World Liberty Financial. The posts have since been deleted, but screenshots indicate they were viewed by at least 200,000 people. Data from token analysis platform DEXTools suggests that around 2,000 people collectively purchased $1.8 million worth of the fake token.