Tether-linked Super PAC’s first $300,000 spending went to a company co-founded by the CEO, allegedly involving pay-to-play and favoritism.
A super political action committee affiliated with Tether filed paperwork with the U.S. Federal Election Commission showing that its first $300k expenditure went to Nxum Group, founded by Tether U.S. CEO Bo Hines, to buy campaign ads for Georgia Republican candidate Clay Fuller, raising questions about pay-to-play.
GateNews·4h ago
