Donald Trump’s pardon of Changpeng Zhao (aka “CZ”) signals more than forgiveness, it broadcasts a new era of crypto-friendliness and raises questions about influence.

The Pardon: A Clean Slate for CZ

Yesterday, the White House announced that President Trump had granted a full pardon to Changpeng Zhao, CZ, founder of the mega-exchange Binance.

Changpeng Zhao
Changpeng Zhao

Zhao had pleaded guilty in 2023 to failing to maintain an effective anti-money-laundering program. As Reuters noted, “In a statement, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said [Trump] had ‘exercised his constitutional authority by issuing a pardon for Mr Zhao, who was prosecuted by the Biden Administration in their war on cryptocurrency.’” Binance paid about $4.3 billion to resolve U.S. Justice Department claims.

Zhao also personally served nearly four months in prison. In his post-pardon remarks, Zhao wrote: “Deeply grateful … to President Trump … Will do everything we can to help make America the Capital of Crypto.”

Trump’s Crypto Narrative: What He’s Saying and Why

Trump frames the pardon as a correction of regulatory overreach. The White House line: Zhao was targeted unfairly, the previous administration was hostile to crypto, and now the “war on crypto is over.” This plays well with a key audience: cryptocurrency firms, digital-asset investors and business allies who felt under siege.

The pardon fits into a broader trend of Trump granting clemency to high-profile business figures. Earlier in 2025, he pardoned the founders of crypto exchange BitMEX, who faced anti-money-laundering charges, and Nikola’s founder, convicted of fraud. He also commuted the sentence of a former executive from the defunct media company Ozy Media.

But there’s a second layer: the connections between Zhao, Binance and Trump’s own crypto-adjacent ventures. The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump’s own crypto initiatives were being administered by Binance.

Bottom line: it’s not only a pardon, it’s a policy pivot, packaged with spectacle and what seems like a case of “You help me, I’ll help you”.

[#highlighted-links#]

Criticisms of the Pardon

Criticism of the pardon has been swift and pointed. Senator Elizabeth Warren blasted the move as evidence of corruption, saying that allowing Changpeng Zhao to receive a full pardon sends the wrong message about accountability in the crypto industry. She flagged concerns that the pardon undermines trust in the rule of law and raises troubling questions about whether the powerful and well-connected are held to different standards.

What It Might Mean for the Crypto Industry

Opportunity Knocks?

With the conviction removed, Zhao, and by extension Binance, may face fewer barriers to re-engagement in the U.S. market. The conviction was a major strategic obstacle. The signal to industry: “We’re open for business, big business.” The ruling could ease licensing, banking relations and regulatory friction.

Regulatory Loosening?

The move might foreshadow a lighter touch from regulators. If the top target gets a pardon, what does that say about policy posture? Crypto firms may interpret this as a green light to accelerate growth, less wary of enforcement.

Accountability Questions

Of course, the flip side: when a convicted executive gets off, what does enforcement mean? Critics will ask: Are rules still rules? Or is it now about who you know? Trust in the system may take a hit if pardons look selective.

What It Says About Trump’s Strategy

This isn’t just about crypto, it’s about power, alliances and branding. By pardoning CZ, Trump demonstrates that major business figures can become allies. He signals to donors and sectors that support him: you align with me, I align with you. Also, it reinforces his image as unconventional, willing to overturn conventions. For better or worse.

What to Watch Next

  • A U.S. push: Will Binance roll out new services, re-entry strategies or major partnerships now that Zhao’s legal cloud is lifted?
  • Regulator movement: Will this signal a wave of reduced enforcement? Will other crypto executives assume pardons or leniency is on the table?
  • Market reaction: Look out for increased volatility in crypto as participants recalibrate around regulation risk.
  • Political optics & conflict of interest: Given the overlap of business, politics and regulation, will critics dig into the timing, the connections and the precedent?
  • Federal enforcement doctrine: Is this a one-off gesture or part of a broader regulatory philosophy shift?

Final Take

The pardon of Changpeng Zhao by President Trump is more than a legal reset—it’s a power move. It tells the crypto industry: you matter. It tells regulators: the enforcement era has changed. And it tells observers: business, politics and innovation are converging in bold, messy ways.

Whether that convergence leads to sustainable growth or unchecked risk remains to be seen, but one thing’s clear: the rules of the crypto game might just be changing.

For more stories around the edges of crypto and fintech, visit our Trending pages.