A leaked document published by Argentine investigative outlet La Nación alleges a $5 million payment to President Javier Milei’s inner circle in exchange for endorsing a digital asset project called Libra, triggering a federal inquiry, a token crash, and a political crisis in Buenos Aires.
The leaked memorandum of understanding, reportedly dated December 2025, outlines a payment of $5 million in USDT to a shell company linked to Milei’s associates. According to report by ElDestape, in exchange, the document alleges Milei agreed to publicly endorse Libra as a preferred stablecoin for Argentine citizens and to facilitate a regulatory sandbox giving the project preferential access to Argentina’s financial infrastructure.
Analysts tracking the timeline noted that the alleged MoU period corresponds with a stretch in early 2026 when Milei repeatedly praised private, non-state currency alternatives during national broadcasts. Whether those public statements reflect the alleged arrangement or Milei’s longstanding libertarian economic philosophy is precisely what the federal inquiry will attempt to establish.
A federal prosecutor in Buenos Aires opened an official inquiry this morning into illicit enrichment and influence peddling. Opposition leaders moved immediately, calling for a formal impeachment inquiry. The speed of the political response reflects how combustible the allegation is given Argentina’s economic context. A president who built his identity around dismantling corrupt state institutions now faces accusations of taking cryptocurrency payments to grant regulatory favours.
Casa Rosada issued a brief statement calling the document a clumsy forgery intended to destabilise the administration’s economic reforms. Milei’s personal response on X was a meme of a lion with the caption “LA CASTA ESTÁ DESESPERADA,” meaning the political establishment is desperate, without directly addressing the $5 million figure. That non-denial denial is already drawing attention from legal commentators tracking the case.
Markets responded before the legal system did. The Libra token fell more than 42% within three hours of La Nación publishing the report. Binance and OKX both temporarily paused trading for the pair citing extreme volatility and regulatory uncertainty. A 42% decline in three hours on the back of a political scandal involving the project’s alleged state sponsor is a liquidity event, not a normal price correction.
The pause on major exchanges compresses the damage by preventing further panic selling in illiquid conditions, but it also signals that the exchanges themselves view the regulatory uncertainty as material enough to warrant intervention. That is a meaningful assessment from two of the largest crypto platforms in the world.
The Libra allegation lands in a specific context. Argentina has been one of the most active emerging market adoptors of stablecoins and cryptocurrency, driven by chronic peso devaluation and widespread distrust of the traditional banking system. Milei’s election on an explicitly pro-private currency, anti-central bank platform made Argentina one of the most watched markets for crypto regulatory development globally.
If the allegations are substantiated, the damage extends beyond Milei’s presidency. It reinforces every concern that skeptics have raised about cryptocurrency’s vulnerability to political capture and preferential regulatory treatment in emerging markets. It also complicates the narrative that crypto adoption in Argentina reflects organic grassroots demand rather than top-down political engineering.
The document’s authenticity remains disputed. The federal inquiry is at its opening stage. The government denies everything. None of that changes the immediate reality: a sitting president is under criminal investigation for an alleged cryptocurrency deal, and the token at the centre of it has lost nearly half its value in an afternoon.
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