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US senator sounds alarm on DeFi, cites PancakeSwap amid market structure delay

US senator sounds alarm on DeFi, cites PancakeSwap amid market structure delay

With the US Senate set to break for the holidays, Senator Elizabeth Warren asked Justice and Treasury Department officials to disclose any potential investigations into the DeFi platform.

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US Senator Elizabeth Warren, one of the more outspoken voices against digital assets in Congress, is calling for answers from Justice Department and Treasury Department officials about a potential investigation into decentralized crypto exchanges, citing concerns over PancakeSwap and Uniswap. 

In a Monday letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Attorney General Pam Bondi, Warren asked whether their respective departments were “investigating significant national security risks posed by decentralized cryptocurrency exchanges like PancakeSwap.”

The Massachusetts senator raised concerns about “improper political influence” from the Trump administration over the selective enforcement of crypto companies and reports of money laundering tied to North Korea, asking for a response by Jan. 12.

“As Congress considers crypto market structure legislation—including rules to prevent terrorists, criminals, and rogue states from exploiting decentralized finance (DeFi) to fund their activities—it is critical to understand whether you are seriously investigating these risks,” Warren wrote to Bessent and Bondi, adding:

“The public deserves to know whether you are investigating the serious risks identified by national security experts and the crypto industry itself.”

Government, United States, Department of Justice, Investigation, PancakeSwap
Monday letter from Senator Elizabeth Warren. Source: Senate Banking Committee

Warren’s letter came as the US Senate prepared to wind down activities before the chamber broke for the holidays. Some Republicans on the Banking Committee had expected to address the digital market structure bill, known as the Responsible Financial Innovation Act, before the end of the year. However, Chair Tim Scott confirmed on Monday that a markup hearing on the legislation had been pushed to 2026.

Related: Top US Democrat signals fight over crypto market structure

The Massachusetts senator also raised concerns over reports that PancakeSwap had been “drumming up interest among traders to use coins issued by the Trump family’s main crypto company, World Liberty Financial.”

Some Senate Democrats have raised concerns about the US president’s potential influence and conflicts of interest regarding the legislation, given his and his family’s ties to the crypto industry.

XRP lawyer who challenged Warren in 2024 will run again

John Deaton, the lawyer who ran against Warren in the 2024 US election, is making another bid for Congress. Deaton has been an advocate for XRP (XRP) holders in court, emerging as a prominent figure in the cryptocurrency industry over the past few years.