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Just caught up on something pretty wild that's been brewing in the crypto space, and it's the kind of story that really shows why due diligence matters in this industry.
So here's the deal. About two years ago, there were these two guys running Dough Finance - Chase Herro and Zak Folkman. They were pitching this platform to investors, talking about yield strategies and risk management. A trader named Jonathan Lopez from Miami bought in hard, putting $1 million into Dough back in May 2024. Herro personally walked him through their high-risk strategies, the kind of aggressive plays that promise big returns if things go right.
Then in July 2024, everything got wiped. A hack drained over $2.5 million from the platform - turns out it was due to vulnerabilities in their own code. Lopez watched his million disappear along with hundreds of other investors. Herro and Folkman initially promised they'd make it right, texting people saying they'd "take care of it" and posting in Telegram that they wouldn't stop until everyone was made whole.
But here's where it gets interesting. By August, Chase Herro and Folkman just ghosted. The Telegram channels went silent, accounts abandoned, and they disappeared from the scene entirely.
Except they didn't actually disappear. They were already building their next project - World Liberty Financial. And this time, they had serious connections. Through presidential envoy Steve Witkoff, they got introduced to Trump and his sons. Trump took on the title of Chief Crypto Advocate, his sons became Web3 Ambassadors, and suddenly the project had serious backing.
World Liberty moved fast. They pushed over $550 million in tokens. Chase Herro and Folkman pulled in at least $65 million for themselves, while the Trump family reportedly took around $400 million. All this while former Dough investors were still waiting for answers about their losses.
Jonathan Lopez didn't just wait around though. He filed suit in Miami federal court in January 2025, alleging fraud and securities violations. His attorney argued that Herro made specific promises about safety that turned out to be false. Herro's legal team countered by saying Lopez was a sophisticated investor who should have known better, and that the hack was beyond their control. The trial is set for this month, April 2026.
The recovery situation from the original hack has been basically non-existent. They claimed to recover $281,000 with help from SEAL 911, and said they'd do pro-rata payouts. But when CertiK checked in September, only $180,000 had actually been distributed to 134 wallets. Most of the Dough users I've seen talking about it said they got nothing and have no idea how the payout selection even worked.
What's wild is that despite all this baggage, Chase Herro and Folkman's new venture with Trump drew minimal scrutiny. The legal experts are saying victims will probably pursue negligence claims since they're easier to prove than outright fraud. And those disclaimers about their tech being experimental don't necessarily protect them from liability.
The whole thing wrapped up in a pretty on-the-nose way. While Lopez and other Dough victims were still fighting to recover anything, Chase Herro and Folkman were in Washington DC in January, celebrating at Trump's inaugural ball. It's the kind of story that makes you think about who's actually accountable when things go wrong in crypto, and whether connections matter more than consequences.