Trump Gives Binance Founder 'CZ A Full Presidential Pardon, Saying that "The Biden Administration’s war on crypto is over"...
Binance founder and former Chief Changpeng “CZ” Zhao has received a presidential pardon from U.S. President Donald Trump, closing the book on one of the most closely watched cases in digital-asset enforcement.
Zhao was sentenced in April 2024 to four months in prison after pleading guilty to a single count tied to U.S. anti-money-laundering compliance. He completed that sentence in September 2024. As part of the broader resolution with U.S. authorities, Binance agreed to pay $4.3 billion and implement enhanced controls after investigators said the exchange enabled some users to evade sanctions.
In announcing the pardon, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt framed Zhao’s prosecution—initiated under the previous administration—as emblematic of a wider “war on cryptocurrency,” arguing there were “no allegations of fraud or identifiable victims,” and that an earlier push for a multi-year sentence had harmed U.S. credibility. “The Biden Administration’s war on crypto is over,” she said.
What Makes This Case Unusual...
Supporters note Zhao is, by their accounting, the first known first-time offender to receive a custodial sentence for this particular non-fraud charge. The sentencing judge found no evidence Zhao knowingly facilitated illicit transactions and said it was reasonable for him to believe illicit funds were not present on the platform. The pardon doesn’t rewrite that record, but it does erase remaining federal consequences for Zhao personally.
Policy Context: A Clearer Pro-Crypto Pivot...
The move aligns with the Trump administration’s more accommodating posture toward digital assets. Since taking office in January, the President has:
Pledged to make the U.S. the world’s “crypto capital.”
Floated the concept of a national cryptocurrency reserve.
Backed efforts to make it easier for Americans to allocate retirement savings to digital assets.
Released his own token ahead of inauguration, placing crypto squarely in the political mainstream—supporters call it pragmatic adoption; critics see it as performative.
The Road Ahead...
Zhao stepped down as Binance CEO in November 2023, calling the decision “not easy to let go emotionally” but “the right thing to do.” Binance—registered in the Cayman Islands—remains the largest venue globally for trading crypto and other digital assets by volume. The company has reportedly pursued clemency for nearly a year, while fielding ongoing regulatory obligations under its settlement.
Separate reports have described conversations between representatives of the Trump family—whose World Liberty Financial is active in crypto—and Binance. Those talks, as characterized publicly, centered on the sector’s direction and policy environment rather than any announced transaction.
Why Markets Care...
Regulatory temperature check: A presidential pardon doesn’t alter the compliance requirements facing exchanges, but it does signal a friendlier top-down stance—potentially easing perceived headline risk for U.S. institutions on the sidelines.
Talent gravity: With the cloud over CZ lifted, founders and executives may view the U.S. as incrementally less adversarial, provided firms invest in controls and cooperate early.
Policy runway: Initiatives like a crypto reserve or retirement-account access still require legislative and agency follow-through. Today’s signal is political; the operational changes will come down to rulemaking and inter-agency coordination.
The Other Side of the Ledger...
Critics of the pardon will argue that compliance lapses at major platforms have real national-security implications and that accountability at the top deters future abuse. Expect renewed debate on whether executive clemency undermines deterrence—or simply corrects an outlier outcome for a non-fraud case.
Bottom Line...
Zhao’s pardon is a symbolic endcap to a multi-year saga and a strong indicator of where the current administration wants crypto policy to go: normalization instead of stigmatization, with an emphasis on building within the rules rather than litigating against the industry. The regulatory playbook hasn’t vanished; the posture has.
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Author: Jules Laurent
Euro Newsroom |
