Source: CoinEdition
Original Title: Trump Sues JPMorgan, CEO Dimon for $5B Over Debanking Claims
Original Link:
President Donald Trump filed a $5 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase and CEO Jamie Dimon on Thursday in Florida state court, alleging the bank terminated accounts belonging to Trump and related business entities for political reasons. The account closures occurred in early 2021 following the January 6 Capitol riot and Trump’s departure from the White House after his electoral defeat to Joe Biden was confirmed.
“He debanked me,” Trump told reporters in Switzerland when asked about Dimon, hours after filing the Miami-Dade County lawsuit. Trump stated, “He shouldn’t be debanking. It’s so wrong. Jamie Dimon is not allowed to do what he did.”
Bank Denies Political Motivation for Terminations
JPMorgan denied closing Trump’s accounts for political reasons, suggesting the terminations resulted from federal rules and regulations the institution has sought to modify during current and previous administrations. Trump and plaintiff business entities had maintained customer relationships with the bank for decades, according to the filing.
The lawsuit seeks at least $5 billion in civil damages, alleging “Plaintiffs are confident that JPMC’s unilateral decision came about as a result of political and social motivations, and JPMC’s unsubstantiated beliefs that it needed to distance itself from President Trump and his conservative political views.”
The filing states, “In essence, JPMC debanked Plaintiffs’ Accounts because it believed that the political tide at the moment favored doing so.” The suit claims JPMorgan failed to disclose termination reasons, but that plaintiffs subsequently learned they were debanked due to political discrimination against Trump, the Trump Organization, affiliated entities, and the Trump family.
The complaint argues that JPMorgan’s decision reflects a growing trend by U.S. financial institutions to cut consumer banking access when political views contradict those of the financial institution.
JPMorgan Advances Blockchain Integration Plans
JPMorgan’s blockchain unit Kinexys plans to bring its bank-issued USD deposit token JPM Coin natively to the Canton network in phases throughout 2026. This integration will allow the token to settle alongside tokenized real-world assets instantly, following a successful proof-of-concept launch on a public blockchain in late 2025.
JPMorgan analysts stated in a January 15, 2026, report that record capital inflows into crypto funds during 2025, totaling nearly $130 billion, have established conditions for continued institutional-led growth in 2026. The analysts noted that clearer U.S. regulations are reducing barriers for institutional participation in digital asset markets.
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Trump Sues JPMorgan, CEO Dimon for $5B Over Debanking Claims
Source: CoinEdition Original Title: Trump Sues JPMorgan, CEO Dimon for $5B Over Debanking Claims Original Link: President Donald Trump filed a $5 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase and CEO Jamie Dimon on Thursday in Florida state court, alleging the bank terminated accounts belonging to Trump and related business entities for political reasons. The account closures occurred in early 2021 following the January 6 Capitol riot and Trump’s departure from the White House after his electoral defeat to Joe Biden was confirmed.
“He debanked me,” Trump told reporters in Switzerland when asked about Dimon, hours after filing the Miami-Dade County lawsuit. Trump stated, “He shouldn’t be debanking. It’s so wrong. Jamie Dimon is not allowed to do what he did.”
Bank Denies Political Motivation for Terminations
JPMorgan denied closing Trump’s accounts for political reasons, suggesting the terminations resulted from federal rules and regulations the institution has sought to modify during current and previous administrations. Trump and plaintiff business entities had maintained customer relationships with the bank for decades, according to the filing.
The lawsuit seeks at least $5 billion in civil damages, alleging “Plaintiffs are confident that JPMC’s unilateral decision came about as a result of political and social motivations, and JPMC’s unsubstantiated beliefs that it needed to distance itself from President Trump and his conservative political views.”
The filing states, “In essence, JPMC debanked Plaintiffs’ Accounts because it believed that the political tide at the moment favored doing so.” The suit claims JPMorgan failed to disclose termination reasons, but that plaintiffs subsequently learned they were debanked due to political discrimination against Trump, the Trump Organization, affiliated entities, and the Trump family.
The complaint argues that JPMorgan’s decision reflects a growing trend by U.S. financial institutions to cut consumer banking access when political views contradict those of the financial institution.
JPMorgan Advances Blockchain Integration Plans
JPMorgan’s blockchain unit Kinexys plans to bring its bank-issued USD deposit token JPM Coin natively to the Canton network in phases throughout 2026. This integration will allow the token to settle alongside tokenized real-world assets instantly, following a successful proof-of-concept launch on a public blockchain in late 2025.
JPMorgan analysts stated in a January 15, 2026, report that record capital inflows into crypto funds during 2025, totaling nearly $130 billion, have established conditions for continued institutional-led growth in 2026. The analysts noted that clearer U.S. regulations are reducing barriers for institutional participation in digital asset markets.