The post Trump-linked Alt5 Sigma faces SEC disclosure gap scrutiny appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Alt5 Sigma is facing fresh scrutiny after conflicting timelines in its SEC filings raised questions about how and when the company disclosed the resignation of its independent accountant. Summary Conflicting timelines in Alt5 Sigma’s SEC filings raise concerns over its auditor resignation and quarterly report delays. Separate date mismatches involving management changes add to scrutiny over the company’s disclosure practices. The firm’s ties to Trump-linked World Liberty Financial continue to shape its governance, balance sheet, and market reaction. In a Black Friday submission, Alt5 Sigma told the SEC it learned on Nov. 21 that its independent accountant, William Hudgens, had resigned “effective immediately.”  But as Forbes reported on Dec. 1, Hudgens said he informed the company before June 30 that he would step away from auditing public companies and would complete no work beyond the second quarter, which was filed on Aug. 12. Alt5 Sigma has still not filed its third-quarter report. In an earlier SEC notice dated Nov. 12, the company blamed its delay, in part, on the “timeliness and responsiveness” of its accountant. When Forbes later asked who was handling the company’s financial review at that time, a spokesperson declined to comment. Public companies must alert the SEC within four business days when an auditor resigns. Securities law experts who spoke with Forbes said the mismatch in dates, paired with the late quarterly filing, could raise regulatory questions. Earlier executive changes also show disclosure gaps The uncertainty around the accountant’s departure follows another filing with unclear dates. Alt5 Sigma reported that its board suspended its chief executive officer, Peter Tassiopoulos, on Oct. 16.  However, an internal email sent to staff on Sept. 4, six weeks earlier, said he was already on temporary leave while a special committee reviewed unspecified matters. The same message said chief revenue officer Vay… The post Trump-linked Alt5 Sigma faces SEC disclosure gap scrutiny appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Alt5 Sigma is facing fresh scrutiny after conflicting timelines in its SEC filings raised questions about how and when the company disclosed the resignation of its independent accountant. Summary Conflicting timelines in Alt5 Sigma’s SEC filings raise concerns over its auditor resignation and quarterly report delays. Separate date mismatches involving management changes add to scrutiny over the company’s disclosure practices. The firm’s ties to Trump-linked World Liberty Financial continue to shape its governance, balance sheet, and market reaction. In a Black Friday submission, Alt5 Sigma told the SEC it learned on Nov. 21 that its independent accountant, William Hudgens, had resigned “effective immediately.”  But as Forbes reported on Dec. 1, Hudgens said he informed the company before June 30 that he would step away from auditing public companies and would complete no work beyond the second quarter, which was filed on Aug. 12. Alt5 Sigma has still not filed its third-quarter report. In an earlier SEC notice dated Nov. 12, the company blamed its delay, in part, on the “timeliness and responsiveness” of its accountant. When Forbes later asked who was handling the company’s financial review at that time, a spokesperson declined to comment. Public companies must alert the SEC within four business days when an auditor resigns. Securities law experts who spoke with Forbes said the mismatch in dates, paired with the late quarterly filing, could raise regulatory questions. Earlier executive changes also show disclosure gaps The uncertainty around the accountant’s departure follows another filing with unclear dates. Alt5 Sigma reported that its board suspended its chief executive officer, Peter Tassiopoulos, on Oct. 16.  However, an internal email sent to staff on Sept. 4, six weeks earlier, said he was already on temporary leave while a special committee reviewed unspecified matters. The same message said chief revenue officer Vay…

Trump-linked Alt5 Sigma faces SEC disclosure gap scrutiny

2025/12/02 11:39

Alt5 Sigma is facing fresh scrutiny after conflicting timelines in its SEC filings raised questions about how and when the company disclosed the resignation of its independent accountant.

Summary

  • Conflicting timelines in Alt5 Sigma’s SEC filings raise concerns over its auditor resignation and quarterly report delays.
  • Separate date mismatches involving management changes add to scrutiny over the company’s disclosure practices.
  • The firm’s ties to Trump-linked World Liberty Financial continue to shape its governance, balance sheet, and market reaction.

In a Black Friday submission, Alt5 Sigma told the SEC it learned on Nov. 21 that its independent accountant, William Hudgens, had resigned “effective immediately.” 

But as Forbes reported on Dec. 1, Hudgens said he informed the company before June 30 that he would step away from auditing public companies and would complete no work beyond the second quarter, which was filed on Aug. 12.

Alt5 Sigma has still not filed its third-quarter report. In an earlier SEC notice dated Nov. 12, the company blamed its delay, in part, on the “timeliness and responsiveness” of its accountant. When Forbes later asked who was handling the company’s financial review at that time, a spokesperson declined to comment.

Public companies must alert the SEC within four business days when an auditor resigns. Securities law experts who spoke with Forbes said the mismatch in dates, paired with the late quarterly filing, could raise regulatory questions.

Earlier executive changes also show disclosure gaps

The uncertainty around the accountant’s departure follows another filing with unclear dates. Alt5 Sigma reported that its board suspended its chief executive officer, Peter Tassiopoulos, on Oct. 16. 

However, an internal email sent to staff on Sept. 4, six weeks earlier, said he was already on temporary leave while a special committee reviewed unspecified matters. The same message said chief revenue officer Vay Tham had also been placed on leave.

Legal experts noted that filings containing material inaccuracies can violate anti-fraud provisions, though proving intent is difficult. The latest management changes were disclosed just before Thanksgiving.

Alt5 Sigma told the SEC it had terminated acting CEO and CFO Jonathan Hugh without cause, ended the consulting agreement of chief operations officer Ron Pitters, accepted the resignation of director David Danziger, and dissolved the special committee after receiving its findings.

Alt5 Sigma’s connection to Trump-linked World Liberty Financial has played a huge role in its recent activity and public visibility. In August, the company agreed to raise $1.5 billion to build a treasury of WLFI tokens.

Half of the deal was paid in WLFI, valued at $0.20 per token, while the other half was raised through a stock offering. The arrangement gave World Liberty Financial influence inside Alt5 Sigma’s boardroom.

Zach Witkoff became chair, while Eric Trump and Zak Folkman were assigned director and observer roles, with adjustments later made after consultation with Nasdaq. A Trump-affiliated entity holds about 22.5 billion WLFI tokens and is entitled to roughly three-quarters of the proceeds from token sales.

According to CoinGecko, Alt5 Sigma now holds about $1.1 billion in WLFI tokens on paper, more than five times its own market capitalization. Its shares have dropped about 80% since the deal was announced.

Alt5 Sigma declined to comment on the discrepancies in its filings, the accountant timeline, or its internal reviews. Regulators have also not commented, leaving open the question of whether the company’s recent disclosures will prompt further inquiry.

Source: https://crypto.news/trump-linked-alt5-sigma-violation-sec-disclosure-2025/

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