Binance sued The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday, accusing the paper of publishing a February 23 article that the exchange says contained “false and defamatory” statements and set off a cascade of unwarranted government attention. In a complaint filed this week, Binance asked a court to clear its name and to hold the news organization accountable for damage the company says extended beyond reputation to triggering unnecessary regulatory and congressional inquiries.
The complaint, made public by Binance and linked in its news release, argues the February piece mischaracterized the depth and effectiveness of the exchange’s compliance program and amplified allegations that Binance allowed large-scale sanctions evasion. Binance’s Global Head of Litigation, Dugan Bliss, framed the lawsuit as a defense of the company’s hard-won credibility, saying the action was necessary “to defend ourselves against misinformation” and to push back on reporting the company called click-driven rather than careful.
The company also reiterated its claim that inaccurate reporting can misdirect scarce government resources and harm the broader crypto industry. Binance did not confine its response to legal filings. The company has published detailed rebuttals and data intended to show measurable improvements in its controls, saying it now employs more than 1,500 people in compliance, investigative and risk roles and has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in systems intended to detect and prevent illicit activity.
Binance highlighted figures it says show a dramatic fall in sanctions-related exposure, along with year-over-year drops in direct exposure to certain flagged exchanges and cooperation with law enforcement that included tens of thousands of requests processed in 2025. The company framed these numbers as evidence that operational improvements, not negligence, lie at the heart of its approach.
The timing of the lawsuit comes amid renewed scrutiny from U.S. lawmakers and federal prosecutors. Recent reporting, including articles in The Wall Street Journal, has described the Justice Department’s interest in whether Binance was used to funnel funds to sanctioned actors, and prompted congressional letters from senators seeking answers about the company’s historical controls.
Binance said those inquiries were in part the product of the disputed coverage, and the lawsuit seeks to draw a legal line between what the exchange calls reporting errors and the real-world consequences that followed. The Journal’s reporting itself referenced active probes into alleged flows tied to Iran and other actors, a dynamic that has pushed the company back into high-stakes regulatory territory.
Market reaction on Wednesday was muted. Binance’s native token, BNB, traded near the low-$600s during U.S. market hours, roughly flat on the day, reflecting investor attention split between legal headlines, broader crypto-market trends and macroeconomic signals. Analysts say that while litigation and regulatory headlines can rattle sentiment in the short term, long-term price drivers for exchange tokens tend to remain tied to on-platform activity, product rollouts and macro liquidity.
This lawsuit is only the latest chapter in a longer saga for the company. Binance has faced a series of regulatory challenges and legal actions in recent years, including a high-profile enforcement settlement in 2023 that reshaped how regulators and markets view the industry. Legal experts said the defamation claim raises complex questions about how courts balance free-press protections with alleged factual errors that companies say inflict concrete harm.
In its closing remarks, Binance framed the suit as a corrective measure: the company said it will continue to cooperate with law enforcement, strengthen its controls, and “correct the record when false statements cause harm.” For now, the lawsuit adds a fresh and public legal dispute between one of the industry’s largest players and a major business news outlet. It is a clash that could test the boundaries between aggressive investigative reporting and the responsibilities of publishers to verify the facts that can reverberate through markets and governments.


