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Trump’s Crypto Play Fuels Senators’ Backlash and Bill to Ban President Memecoins

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President Donald Trump’s personal involvement in crypto has inspired a vigorous Democratic response in the Senate, including a new bill from Senator Chris Murphy to ban presidents and their families from dabbling in memecoins or issuing other financial assets.

As the Connecticut lawmaker was introducing the Modern Emoluments and Malfeasance Enforcement (MEME) Act overnight, fellow Democrat Elizabeth Warren was fresh from a Senate floor speech on Monday evening in which she outlined what would get senators from her party to return to the table on stablecoin legislation. In just a few short days, Democrats have mounted a resistance to the U.S. digital assets industry’s Washington momentum.

Murphy’s effort — matched in the House of Representatives by a bill from Representative Sam Liccardo, a California Democrat — is targeting the president’s $TRUMP memecoin and the controversial ways in which he and his family seem to be benefiting financially from its launch just before his inauguration. The senator argued that there’s no way to know who is buying the coin and enriching Trump. Last week, Eric Trump, one of the president’s children, announced that an Abu Dhabi-based investment firm would use Trump-backed World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin to help it close out a $2 billion investment in global crypto exchange Binance.

«The Trump meme coin is the single most corrupt act ever committed by a president,» Murphy said in a statement on Tuesday. «Donald Trump is essentially posting his Venmo for any billionaire CEO or foreign oligarch to cash in some favors by secretly sending him millions of dollars.»

His legislation has a wider range than just the president and his memecoin, seeking to ban the president, vice president, members of Congress, senior administration officials and any of their families from issuing, sponsoring or endorsing any financial asset — including securities, futures, commodities and digital assets. The Democrat’s bill is unlikely to go anywhere under a Republican majority, but it represents a clear party response to Trump’s activities.

White House spokespeople didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Elsewhere in the Senate, Massachusetts Democrat Warren — a longtime critic of the crypto industry — ran through the list of changes that can be made to stablecoin legislation to make it more palatable to Democrats. On the Senate floor, she said the stablecoins bills that had so far been advancing through the Senate and House committees with bipartisan support, should include more controls on money laundering and other illicit use, a ban on big tech firms as issuers and limits on government officials issuing stablecoins to «line their own pockets.»

The Trump family is heavily involved in World Liberty Financial, a company that has issued its own stablecoin.

“We cannot bless Trump’s corruption,” Warren said, but she contended that the stablecoin regulations can move forward with some consumer-friendly compromises.

After the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act easily cleared the Senate Banking Committee on which Warren is the ranking Democrat, many of her colleagues balked at developments in Trump’s crypto business, including a dinner the president planned to host for top memecoin holders and the foreign use of WLFI’s stablecoins. Nine Democrats objected in a statement that said they couldn’t support the existing stablecoin bill under these conditions.

Read More: Dems Stall Stablecoin Bill, Jeopardizing More Important Crypto Regulation Bill

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Third Arrest Made in Manhattan Bitcoin Kidnapping, Torture Case

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A man suspected of helping kidnap and torture an Italian cryptocurrency investor in a Manhattan townhouse has surrendered to New York City police.

William Duplessie turned himself in Tuesday after what officials described as days of negotiations with authorities, the New York Times reports.

He is the third suspect in an alleged plot to extract the keys to a bitcoin wallet belonging to Michael Valentino Teofrasto Carturan, a crypto fund associate who said he was held captive and abused for nearly three weeks.

The ordeal began on May 6, when Carturan arrived at a 17-room townhouse on Prince Street in Manhattan’s NoLiTa neighborhood. He was set to reconnect with former fund partner John Woeltz, who, along with another associate Beatrice Folchi, allegedly ambushed him.

Police say the group attempted to force Carturan to surrender access to his crypto holdings, reportedly worth millions, through physical threats and psychological abuse.

According to law enforcement, Carturan was assaulted, suspended from the top floor of the five-story building, and held at gunpoint. He managed to escape and alert authorities nearly three weeks later.

The New York City Police Department case has drawn attention for its brutality and connection to a growing trend of physical attacks on crypto users.

In France, the daughter and grandson of Paymium CEO Pierre Noizat were recently targeted in a failed kidnapping attempt captured on video. Earlier in the same city, a crypto millionaire’s father was abducted and had a finger severed before being rescued.

Another incident saw David Balland, co-founder of hardware wallet maker Ledger, and his wife kidnapped from their home. Authorities later rescued the couple and seized the ransom payment.

While Folchi has since been released and her prosecution deferred, Woeltz is scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday. Both Woeltz and Duplessie face kidnapping, assault and illegal gun possession charges.

An attorney representing Woeltz didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Steak n’ Shake COO Says Bitcoin Payments Cut Processing Fees in Half

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LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Steak n’ Shake has only been accepting bitcoin payments for two weeks, but the American fast food chain’s COO Dan Edwards said it’s already been a “win” for both the company and its customers.

Speaking at Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Edwards said that bitcoin payments have been faster and cheaper than traditional credit card payments.

“When customers choose to pay in bitcoin instead of credit cards, we are saving about 50% in our processing fees,” Edwards said. “This means that bitcoin is a win for the customer, it’s a win for us as a merchant, and it’s a win for the bitcoin community.”

Edwards said that on May 16, the day Steak n’ Shake began accepting bitcoin payments, one in every 500 bitcoin transactions globally happened at Steak n’ Shake.

“Accepting bitcoin allows us to meet our customers where our customers are,” Edwards said. “We were seeking to provide our customers with another viable option by which to pay for our products. We understand that allowing customers to pay with bitcoin alongside cash and credit cards, puts bitcoin on par with those methods, those other globally accepted payment methods.”

Edwards added that you can buy more than just a burger and beef tallow fries with your bitcoin at Steak n’ Shake – the company is also allowing would-be franchisees to purchase their franchises with bitcoin.

Riding the success of bitcoin payments, Edwards said the company is looking for other ways it can embrace technology to bring its food into the future — including robo-taxis, cyber-chefs, and drones.

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MARA’s Fred Thiel Says U.S. Should Start Mining Bitcoin to Fill Strategic Reserve

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LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Marathon Digital Holdings (MARA) CEO Fred Thiel has an idea for how U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration can make good on its promises to build out a strategic bitcoin reserve: start mining.

Speaking on a panel at Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Thiel said that the U.S. government has many potential ways to generate bitcoin to fill the strategic bitcoin reserve that would adhere to the “budget-neutral” acquisition strategy laid out in Trump’s March executive order, including using excess hydroenergy to mine bitcoin domestically.

Though it’s been nearly three months since Trump authorized the establishment of a strategic bitcoin reserve, it remains unclear exactly how — and when — the government will take steps to actually begin filling it, a source of evident frustration among a number of speakers at the conference.

“I think it’s critical,” Thiel said of acquiring bitcoin for the reserve. “The U.S. making a statement that we’re going to have a strategic reserve is an empty statement unless you start putting stuff into it.”

At this point, the reserve is supposed to hold all of the bitcoin that has been sized by the government in civil and criminal forfeitures — estimated to be approximately 200,000 bitcoins. But many in the industry and government, including Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), think that getting the government’s existing stockpile of bitcoin into a strategic reserve is merely a first step, to be followed by bigger, more meaningful acquisitions.

In March, Lummis re-introduced legislation — the so-called BITCOIN Act of 2025 — aimed at codifying Trump’s plans for a strategic bitcoin reserve. Under Lummis’ plan, after getting all of the forfeited bitcoin into the reserve, the U.S. government would spend the next two to five years converting a portion of its gold certificates into bitcoin.

“We have enough assets in under performing assets that we can get five percent of the world’s bitcoin without spending a single dime,” Lummis said.

However, Lummis acknowledged that it’s unlikely that any real movement on the BITCOIN Act — or, more broadly, taking any significant steps to fill the strategic reserve with anything other than forfeited assets — will come before Congress works its way through stablecoin and market structure legislation.

“It’s going to be a heavier lift than I thought because so many people don’t understand bitcoin,” Lummis said.

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