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David Sacks responds to the media characterization of his cryptocurrency sale: "It wasn't a dump"
Recent decision by David Sacks, White House cryptocurrency chief, to liquidate his digital portfolio has caused tension between the official and the media. Sacks used social media to directly question how his divestment was portrayed, arguing that the characterization used by the media did not reflect the reality of the situation. In his public statement, he made his position clear: it was an obligatory compliance with government ethical standards, not a “dump” of assets as some coverage suggested.
Media characterization and Sacks’s response
The disagreement between Sacks and certain media sectors lies in the terminology used to describe his sale of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana. While some outlets used terms like “dump” to characterize the transaction, Sacks clarified that he deliberately used the word “divestment” to emphasize that it was a forced action due to legal requirements, not a market decision. In his public statement, he noted that he would have preferred to keep his digital assets, but the mandatory ethical regulations of the administration left no alternative. “Serving President Trump and the American people is an honor, even if it means leaving my crypto holdings,” the official stated.
Timeline of divestment and regulatory compliance
In early March 2025, Sacks confirmed he had sold all his cryptocurrency holdings before officially assuming his position. The transactions included significant positions in Bitcoin (currently trading at $70.98K), Ethereum ($2.07K), and Solana ($88.74), some of the main digital assets in the market. Most of these sales were executed shortly after President Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, with the divestment of the Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund confirmed at the end of that month.
This action ensured that Sacks did not hold direct personal investments in cryptocurrencies that could create conflicts of interest in his role as crypto policy manager. However, the venture capital firm Crypto Ventures, associated with the official, continues to hold investments in multiple emerging projects in the sector. This distinction is crucial: the personal divestment was specifically ordered due to his government position, not due to distrust in the crypto industry.
Ethical standards and conflicts of interest in administration
Modern governments establish strict ethics standards to prevent public officials from experiencing conflicts of interest. Maintaining significant investments in sectors that are overseen or regulated can create apparent conflicts that compromise the impartiality of policy decisions. In Sacks’s case, whose role includes shaping digital policy and artificial intelligence for the United States, divesting from his personal crypto holdings was a necessary step to ensure the perception and reality of impartiality.
Implications for U.S. crypto policy
The controversy over the characterization of Sacks’s divestment reflects broader tensions regarding how the government’s commitment to the crypto sector is portrayed. While Sacks emphasizes his dedication to the sector through his official position, others question whether such dedication is genuine after liquidating personal assets. Nonetheless, Crypto Ventures’s continued investment in new projects suggests that Sacks’s vision for the sector’s future remains intact, despite the necessary separation from his personal investments during his public service.
Sacks’s response to media characterization highlights a fundamental challenge in modern political communication: the gap between how public actions are perceived and how involved actors explain them. The decision to divest was presented as mandatory due to regulation, while some media reinterpreted it as indicative of changing market confidence. This divergent characterization will continue to be central in debates over the credibility of the U.S. government in cryptocurrency matters in the coming years.