WASHINGTON — Crypto.com was under siege.
For more than a year, the firm had been investigated by President Joe Biden's Democratic administration, part of an aggressive push to regulate the largely unregulated cryptocurrency industry. Financial regulators had told the company that enforcement action was likely.
Then Donald Trump won the 2024 election, and the company's legal peril dissipated.
Crypto.com ramped up spending to a lobbyist close to Trump and donated $11 million to political committees tied to the Republican president, records show. Within months, the investigation was dropped. By August, Crypto.com announced it was plunging roughly $1 billion worth of assets into a venture with a new partner — Trump's social media company.
Legal and ethics experts say Crypto.com's journey from investigative target to Trump business partner provides a case study of the conflicts of interest that have arisen in Trump's second presidency. Unlike any of his predecessors in the modern era, Trump has allowed his family businesses to enter lucrative arrangements with companies regulated by the federal government, some of which have benefited from action taken by his administration.
In this instance, the deal struck with Crypto.com was favorable for the president's social media company, which has lost hundreds of millions of dollars since its 2021 launch. Trump Media and Technology Group put up little cash yet received a substantial ownership stake in the new treasury for Crypto.com's Cronos token.
Presidents have historically gone to great lengths to ''avoid even the appearance that they are using the office for personal profit,'' said Kedric Payne, who was formerly a top attorney for the Office of Congressional Ethics.
''It seems like another example of the pay-to-play administration,'' said Payne, who leads the ethics program at the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center in Washington. ''There is clearly a perception that in order to get favorable policies and acts from the administration, a company needs to provide a financial benefit to the president.''