Regulatory pressure on the SEC has intensified after its decision to resolve the Justin Sun case came shortly before the departure of its enforcement chief, Margaret Ryan, prompting fresh questions from lawmakers.
In a letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins, Sen. Richard Blumenthal pointed to the agency’s move to drop its case against Justin Sun just days before Ryan stepped down in March, writing that her “abrupt departure… raises questions” amid reports that enforcement staff were blocked from pursuing certain crypto cases.
Originally filed under the Biden administration, the case accused Sun and affiliated entities of conducting unregistered securities sales tied to TRX and BTT tokens. Allegations also included market manipulation through wash trading and undisclosed promotional campaigns involving celebrities.
It was later dismissed, with Rainberry agreeing to pay a $10 million civil penalty, while Sun neither admitted nor denied the claims.
The scrutiny comes as lawmakers have begun questioning whether enforcement decisions were influenced by political connections, particularly given Sun’s investments in Trump-linked crypto ventures.
Attention has also centred on Sun’s financial ties to Trump-linked crypto ventures, including significant investments in World Liberty Financial and involvement with the $TRUMP memecoin. Lawmakers have indicated that these connections warrant closer examination, particularly as the SEC has stepped back from multiple high-profile cases across the sector.
Since early 2025, enforcement actions against firms such as Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance have been dropped or paused, prompting broader concerns over consistency in regulatory oversight.
In a separate letter, Sen. Elizabeth Warren has also raised concerns over whether Ryan faced resistance when pursuing cases tied to individuals within President Donald Trump’s circle.
Blumenthal said the SEC “may have exercised preferential treatment for financial partners of President Trump,” adding that the agency appeared to have declined to pursue “credible fraud cases” despite internal warnings.
His letter requests “all records and communications” between the SEC’s Division of Enforcement and senior leadership since Jan. 20, 2025, related to crypto enforcement actions.
Blumenthal has also requested internal records and communications between the SEC’s enforcement division and senior leadership, as well as any correspondence involving the Trump family, as part of an ongoing effort to assess whether external factors influenced the agency’s decisions.


