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As Lutnick Faces U.S. Senate, Elizabeth Warren Scrutinizes His Tether Ties

Howard Lutnick, who is President Donald Trump’s nominee to be secretary of Commerce, is drawing scrutiny on his relationship with Tether from Senator Elizabeth Warren — the ranking Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee and one of Congress’ most reliable critics of the digital asset sector.

As CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, the Wall Street firm that acts as the U.S. banker for leading global stablecoin issuer Tether, the Massachusetts Democrat said Lutnick backed a crypto operation with “clear ties to criminal activity.”

“You played a critical role in the rise of Tether, a shadowy crypto firm with profits exceeding $7.7 billion in 2024,” Warren wrote in a letter to Lutnick, who is making his case Wednesday to the Senate Commerce Committee that’s considering his confirmation to Trump’s cabinet.

As Tether’s U.S. Treasuries dealer and the main custodian of its Treasury reserves, she suggested Lutnick’s firm shares responsibility for illicit abuse of its stablecoin (USDT) by criminals and terrorists. She also contended that Cantor Fitzgerald owns part of Tether, though Lutnick testified on Wednesday that the firm has a convertible bond but not a direct equity stake.

“The use of Tether’s stablecoin has been the subject of over 150 investigations across four continents, including here with the Department of Justice and the Department of the Treasury,” Warren wrote to Lutnick, who led Trump’s transition team as he returned to the White House. 

Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino has sought to defend his company’s reputation and said of the political rise of Lutnick, “We don’t expect any political favors by anyone.”

Lutnick said in the confirmation hearing that he supports greater U.S. auditing demands on stablecoin issuers. He also said U.S. law-enforcement artificial intelligence tools should be deployed.

“Our AI tools will rip illicit activity out of stablecoins within a year or two,” he said. “Our technology on their blockchain will end it, and that’s what we should require.”

The only reason the government is able to detect and track illicit activity on Tether is because of its inherent transparency, Lutnick argued.

“When these same illicit characters use dollars or euros, we don’t know about it,” he said. He contended that U.S.-backed stablecoins “must allow U.S. law enforcement and our AI tools into their models so that we can go find and catch illicit activity.”

Read More: Howard Lutnick: Tether’s Big Backer

UPDATE (January 29, 2025, 18:22 UTC): Adds additional comments from Lutnick.

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