Binance Is Suing The Wall Street Journal — And Now Congress Wants Answers Too
Alex Smith
3 hours ago
The timing couldn’t have been more awkward for Binance. Just as the exchange filed a defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal this week, three US senators turned around and publicly announced they’d be watching any related Justice Department probe like hawks.
For a company still living down a $4.3 billion settlement, the last thing it needed was fresh attention from Capitol Hill.
We have initiated legal action against @WSJ for publishing a false and defamatory report, with the goal of setting the record straight.
This lawsuit is a necessary measure to protect our organization from misinformation, hold WSJ accountable for compromising journalistic… pic.twitter.com/ZwQxjKguzy
— Eleanor Hughes (@eleanorshughes1) March 11, 2026
The Senate Steps In
Senators Elizabeth Warren, Chris Van Hollen, and Ruben Gallego want the DOJ to do this by the book — no shortcuts, no quiet shelving.
Their joint statement made that clear. And they weren’t bluffing about leverage: the trio signaled they’re ready to start pulling documents and hauling in witnesses if they feel the department is dragging its feet or letting things slide.
What set this off was a Wall Street Journal report claiming federal prosecutors are examining whether Iran-linked entities used Binance to move money around US sanctions — with around $1 billion in transfers allegedly under the microscope.
The DOJ hasn’t said a word publicly. Binance says the story is wrong.
Old Wounds
The reason this particular accusation stings more than it might for another company: Binance already went through this. In 2023, it pleaded guilty to anti-money-laundering and sanctions violations and wrote a check for $4.3 billion.
That history is exactly why Warren and her colleagues aren’t inclined to sit back — they’ve seen what happens when enforcement pressure eases up.
Binance’s lawsuit against the Journal is, on the surface, a defamation case. But it’s also an argument about methodology. The company says reporters cherry-picked numbers and dressed up unverified allegations as fact, causing real damage to its reputation and business. It wants a court to call the coverage defamatory and pay accordingly.
What They’re Actually AfterCongressional oversight here isn’t about grandstanding — or at least that’s how the senators are framing it. The questions they’re zeroing in on are specific: Did Binance actually do enough to freeze out sanctioned accounts? Were its compliance tools used properly, or just for show? If someone inside the company raised alarms, did those warnings go anywhere?
Legal experts say this kind of pressure can move fast. What starts as a strongly worded letter can become subpoenas, depositions, requests for records tied to the monitorship Binance has been operating under since its settlement. Former executives could find themselves sitting across from Senate staffers.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView
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