Who won a seat at Trump’s crypto dinner? | World News

The invitees for President Donald Trump’s private dinner for customers of his cryptocurrency business on Thursday included a Chinese billionaire fighting a lawsuit from US regulators, a lawyer for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and a former basketball star, according to a guest l obtained The New York Times and social media posts.The dinner, at which Trump gave remarks, was an extraordinary moment in which the president leveraged his position to make money — for his crypto business and for his Virginia golf club, which hosted the event.
The event’s invited guests were not known publicly beforehand, even to each other. They were identified only the pseudonyms they used on the electronic wallets where they kept their $TRUMP meme coins. Most had gained an invitation becoming one of the top 220 holders of that meme coin over a certain period of time. The Top 25 of those were given VIP status and afforded a more intimate gathering before the dinner and an unofficial tour of the White House on Friday.
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When they arrived at Trump’s club outside Washington on Thursday evening, the digital world had become physical. The invitees’ names and contact information were delineated on paper ls, checked staffers at the door. A Times reporter reviewed one of those ls, and used it to identify people who were present. Some other invitees self-identified on social media. A reporter and photographer from the Times also saw some $TRUMP crypto buyers enter and exit the White House on Friday.
The following were among those who were invited to the festivities:
Invitees to the White House
Justin Sun, a Chinese crypto billionaire who was sued the Securities and Exchange Commission under President Joe Biden for allegedly inflating the value of a cryptocurrency. Sun is a major investor in a separate crypto venture largely owned a company tied to Trump, World Liberty Financial. After Trump took office, the SEC asked a judge to put Sun’s case on hold. He declined to comment Thursday night.Story continues below this ad
Elliot Berke, a Washington attorney who has worked for congressional Republicans and Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. The Times identified him because the invitee l included his email address at his law firm, Berke Farah. He was honored as “Republican Lawyer of the Year” in 2021 the Republican National Lawyers Association.
He did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent via email or LinkedIn message.
Evgeny Gaevoy, founder and CEO of a digital-asset firm, Wintermute. The Times identified him because the l of invitees included his Wintermute email. He did not respond to a request for comment sent via email.
Anil Lulla and Yan Liberman, two co-founders of Delphi Digital, a Miami Beach firm that offers market intelligence for crypto investors. Their corporate emails were included in the l of invitees. They did not respond to requests for comment.Story continues below this ad
Cheng Lu, 32, a crypto investor from Shanghai, was observed a Times reporter entering the White House on Friday. He said he did not have a chance to speak with Trump during the dinner Thursday or at the Friday tour. “I just want to see President Trump,” he said. He plans to go to Las Vegas next for a poker tournament, he said.
Stephen Dworkin, founder of CTS International, was observed a reporter for the Times entering the White House on Friday. The company has helped military contractors, including Israel Aircraft Industries, recruit employees, according to his LinkedIn page. He declined to comment.
Sangrok Oh, CEO of Hyperithm, a Seoul, South Korea- and Tokyo-based firm that manages digital assets for institutional investors in Asia. He was observed entering the Thursday event and was interviewed a reporter for the Times and was seen outside the White House on Friday as the VIP buyers visited for the tour.Story continues below this ad
Matthew Liu, co-founder of cryptocurrency company Origin and former project manager at YouTube, was seen at the White House on his way to the VIP tour. After the tour, he reached out to a reporter to confirm his attendance. “There have been recent unsubstantiated allegations of foreign attendees attempting to buy influence with the president, and there was absolutely zero evidence of this at the event,” he said in an email to the Times. “While there were attendees from both the US and abroad, the central theme of the event was growing our industry together and working with intelligent, fair and innovation-friendly US regulators.”
Other invitees
Caitlin Sinclair, a conservative media personality who has worked as a reporter for pro-Trump One America News and the young-conservatives group, Turning Point Action. She posted photos from the dinner on social media, including one that showed Trump in the background. Sinclair’s role at the event was unclear, but attendees found flyers on their tables with her photo, which said “connect with your host,” and contained a QR code that brought them to Sinclair’s website.
Lamar Odom, a former NBA star now promoting his own meme coin, $ODOM. Odom posted on social media that he was attending the event, and he appeared in other guests’ photos from inside Trump’s club.
Daniel Nizar Boubes was charged with drug-related crimes in Orange County, California, and given two years of probation, court records show. “I was a drug addict for years, and that’s what that’s all about,” Boubes said in a phone interview Friday. He said he has since changed his life and took an interest in crypto. A spokesperson for the Orange County drict attorney’s office said Boubes pleaded guilty to five felony counts, including two counts of bringing a controlled substance into a jail or prison, and was sentenced to two years’ probation. She said the case was dismissed in 2022 after he successfully completed probation.Story continues below this ad
SuKyung Na, an executive at Hyperithm. “Looking forward to interesting conversations and the chance to share a bit about what we do at Hyperithm,” Na wrote before the event. Her corporate email was on the invitee l.
Charles Ayres, a Britain-based crypto marketer and YouTube promoter, confirmed in a phone interview that he attended the Thursday night event. He declined further comment.
Wesley Pryor, founder of Acheron Trading, a firm focused on digital assets. His Acheron email address was on a l of invitees reviewed the Times. On LinkedIn, he said he had been active in cryptocurrency since he was a teenager, and that he now operates out of Singapore, which he called “the world’s most progressive jurisdiction for cryptocurrency.” He did not respond to a request for comment.
Jack Tan Lu, CEO and co-founder of a popular marketplace for nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, called Magic Eden. His email address with his company was included on the invitee l. He did not respond to an email request for comment.Story continues below this ad
Tony Yacoub ls himself on LinkedIn as president of T and A Builders, a general contractor in Downey, California. The Times identified him because his company email address was included in a l of the event’s attendees. He did not respond to requests for comment sent via email or LinkedIn.
Clay Helms and Stephen Hess, two executives from the Metaplex Foundation, a nonprofit focused on digital assets. Their emails through their nonprofit were on the invitee l reviewed the Times. They did not respond to requests for comment.
Asher Ang and Lean Sheng Tan, two executives of hedge fund Hyper-Alpha Capital. On LinkedIn, Tan said he was based in the British Virgin Islands. Their corporate emails were on the invitee l reviewed the Times. They did not respond to requests for comment.
Kain Warwick, a crypto entrepreneur in Sydney and founder of Synthetix, a crypto exchange. He was interviewed the Times.Story continues below this ad
Joel Lee, a software engineer from Singapore who says on social media that he lives in Rwanda. He was observed a Times reporter entering the event Thursday night.
Alexander Michal Kloda, founder of Nickel Digital Asset Management, who describes himself on his LinkedIn account as a “blockchain enthusiast and crypto algorithmic trader.”
Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at Taiwan-based Kronos Research. He posted several photos from the event on LinkedIn, with the caption: “Great to see the support for Crypto industry from Mr. President!”Story continues below this ad
Paul Jacobi, a partner at the investment firm Wexford Capital, was led among the attendees, and a reporter for the Times saw him enter the event. His firm’s website says that Jacobi “focuses on Wexford’s private equity energy investments.”
Chroph Heuermann, who runs a consulting company that advises people on how to lower their taxes, flew in from Germany. He said in an email with the Times that as a non-VIP, he knew beforehand that he would not get to meet Trump, but he said he enjoyed hearing a speech from “the greatest president in hory.”
Verjender Choudhary, a software engineer from St. Louis, said in an email that he saw the dinner as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity “to meet the first crypto president.”
Vincent Deriu, a 27-year-old consultant in New York who was ranked No. 165 on the $TRUMP leaderboard, was interviewed the Times. “If I were to get a selfie or a handshake or something or an autograph, that would be priceless in and of itself for me,” he said.




