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Screenshots Reveal Tyler Winklevoss Urged Trump’s CFTC Nominee To ‘Make Amends’



Key Takeaways

  • In January, Gemini agreed to settle a CFTC lawsuit for $5 million.
  • However, the company has since accused the agency’s enforcement division of misconduct.
  • Screenshots reveal that Gemini CEO Tyler Winklevoss pressured CFTC Chair nominee Brian Quintenz to “make amends” for the division’s actions.

President Trump’s nominee to chair the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Brian Quintenz, has accused Tyler Winklevoss of trying to block his confirmation.

Screenshots Quintenz shared on X reveal that the Gemini founders privately pressured him to intervene in a legal dispute involving the crypto exchange.

Quintenz alleges that Winklevoss reached out to Trump directly to ask that his confirmation be paused after he didn’t give them what they wanted.

Gemini vs. the CFTC Explained

The legal battle between Gemini and the CFTC can be traced back to 2022, when the agency accused Gemini of misrepresenting the details of its Bitcoin futures contract.

The complaint alleged that Gemini gave out loans, credits, and advances of bitcoin to traders that it didn’t tell the regulator about. It also downplayed the role of self-trading and custom fee arrangements for select high-value traders, the complaint charged.

Gemini eventually paid a $5 million penalty to settle the matter in January 2025. However, the company has since gone on the offensive, claiming that the CFTC suit rested on fraudulent whistleblower evidence.

In a letter to the CFTC’s Inspector General, Gemini raised “serious concerns and complaints about the conduct” of the agency’s enforcement division.

Winklevoss Pressures Quintenz Over Gemini Complaint

With Quintenz, Gemini seemingly had an ally at the highest level of the CFTC.

In screenshots he shared on Wednesday, Sep. 10, the CFTC Chair nominee expressed his “extreme disappointment” at the agency’s enforcement division for pursuing the Gemini case “so aggressively.”

“I commit you to having a fair and reasonable review of the matter” to determine if the division acted inappropriately, he told Winklevoss via text.

“The implications of, and solutions to this, however, should be unequivocally left to a fully confirmed Chair,” he added

In the conversation that followed, however, the Gemini founder and CEO appeared unsatisfied with Quintenz’s response.

“Cultural reform, which includes rectifying what happened to us, should be the highest priority,” Winklevoss stated.

“I’d like to understand your thoughts on this and how you plan to align with President Trump and the Administration’s to end the lawfare and make amends for it,” he added.

Implications for CFTC Enforcement Staff

While Gemini’s complaint to the CFTC doesn’t make explicit demands, it implicitly calls for an investigation into misconduct by the agency’s enforcement staff.

While a formal misconduct investigation would fall under the remit of the independent Inspector General’s office, as Chair, Quintenz would have the power to refer an investigation or launch an internal review.

The fact that he refused to commit to either doesn’t seem to have landed well with the Winklevosses.

“It’s my understanding that after this exchange they contacted the President and asked that my confirmation be paused for reasons other than what is reflected in these texts,” Quintenz alleged in his post.

“I’ve never been inclined to release private messages,” he noted,…



Read More: Screenshots Reveal Tyler Winklevoss Urged Trump’s CFTC Nominee To ‘Make Amends’

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