In one of the most corrupt actions ever done by a sitting president, Donald Trump held a dinner that could only be attended by the people who bought the most meme coins he was selling - putting millions of dollars into his own pocket!
Who bought access to Trump at the dinner? The New York Times gives us a list:
Justin Sun, a Chinese crypto billionaire who was sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission under President Joseph R. Biden Jr. for allegedly inflating the value of a cryptocurrency.
Elliot Berke, a Washington attorney who has worked for congressional Republicans and Justice Clarence Thomas of the Supreme Court.
Evgeny Gaevoy, the founder and chief executive of a digital-asset firm, Wintermute.
Anil Lulla and Yan Liberman, two co-founders of Delphi Digital, a Miami Beach firm that offers market intelligence for crypto investors.
Cheng Lu, 32, a crypto investor from Shanghai.
Stephen Dworkin, founder of CTS International.
Sangrok Oh, chief executive of Hyperithm, a Seoul- and Tokyo-based firm that manages digital assets for institutional investors in Asia.
Matthew Liu, co-founder of cryptocurrency company Origin.
Caitlin Sinclair, a conservative media personality who has worked as a reporter for pro-Trump One America News.
Lamar Odom, the former National Basketball Association star now promoting his own memecoin, $ODOM.
Daniel Nizar Boubes was charged with drug-related crimes in Orange County, Calif., and given two years of probation.
SuKyung Na, an executive at Hyperithm.
Charles Ayres, a Britain-based crypto marketer.
Wesley Pryor is the founder of Acheron Trading, a firm focused on digital assets.
Jack Tan Lu is the chief executive and co-founder of a popular marketplace for non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, called Magic Eden.
Tony Yacoub lists himself on LinkedIn as president of T and A Builders, a general contractor in Downey, Calif.
Clay Helms and Stephen Hess, two executives from the Metaplex Foundation, a nonprofit focused on digital assets.
Asher Ang and Lean Sheng Tan, two executives of hedge fund Hyper-Alpha Capital.
Kain Warwick, a crypto entrepreneur in Sydney and founder of Synthetix, a crypto exchange.
Joel Lee, a software engineer from Singapore who says on social media that he lives in Rwanda.
Aleksander Michal Kloda, founder of Nickel Digital Asset Management
Vincent Liu, the chief investment officer at Taiwan-based Kronos Research.
Paul Jacobi, a partner at the investment firm Wexford Capital.
Christoph Heuermann, who runs a consulting company that advises people on how to lower their taxes.
Verjender Choudhary, a software engineer from St. Louis.
Vincent Deriu, a 27-year-old consultant in New York who was ranked No. 165 on the $TRUMP leaderboard.
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