Three sitting US senators have opened a formal investigation into a dinner event tied to US President Donald Trump’s memecoin, with questions mounting over whether the arrangement amounts to a “pay-to-play” scheme that funneled money from ordinary investors to a tight circle of insiders.
Senators Move To Examine The Event
The dinner became a flashpoint after analyst Simon Dedic posted on X that the Trump-linked token had been used to drain money from retail buyers at a scale that dwarfs many past crypto failures.
Based on his figures, roughly $4.3 billion left the pockets of everyday investors. About $1.2 billion of that ended up in wallets controlled by insiders, while $320 million reportedly went to entities connected to the Trump family.
I am wondering whether the Trump memecoin dinner tonight is one of the most damaging thing that has happened to crypto’s reputation in years.
Even worse than FTX or Luna. Those at least pretended to be something legitimate before they collapsed.
But this is the President of the… pic.twitter.com/l9nzwaN1jv
— Simon Dedic (@sjdedic) April 25, 2026
The token itself has lost around 95% of its value from its peak. An estimated 2 million holders are now sitting on losses — most of them late buyers who entered based on hype and name recognition rather than any underlying project.
A Different Kind Of Collapse
What sets this situation apart from earlier crypto disasters is how it unfolded. The FTX collapse and the Terra Luna crash were painful. But both projects, at least on the surface, claimed to offer something real before they fell apart.
Reports indicate that critics see this situation differently — less about a failed experiment, more about a structure that was designed to benefit a few from the start.
That framing is what has made the Trump memecoin dinner such a charged topic in crypto circles. The blending of political branding, celebrity influence, and speculative trading has put the story in front of audiences far beyond the usual crypto crowd.
That visibility cuts both ways. It draws attention to the losses suffered by retail investors, but it also puts crypto itself under a harsher light at a time when the industry has been trying to build mainstream credibility.
Credibility On The LineThe congressional scrutiny comes as the broader crypto industry watches closely. Two million holders are now on record as having lost money on the token, a number large enough to draw attention from lawmakers who have long questioned whether the space needs tighter oversight. That pressure was already building before this event surfaced.
The investigation by the three senators has yet to produce formal findings. But its existence alone signals that this story is moving beyond crypto forums and into the kind of political and regulatory territory that could have lasting consequences for the industry.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView