Thirty-five Members of Congress wrote a letter to the Department of Justice's Public Integrity Section calling for "an immediate investigation" into the dinner on Thursday, specifically citing concerns about "potential corruption and emoluments clause violations." The letter, signed by crypto-friendly lawmakers like Ritchie Torres and Shri Thanedar, as well as more critical representatives like Brad Sherman, noted that companies have explicitly said they would buy $TRUMP tokens to try and influence the president. "U.S. law prohibits foreign persons from contributing to U.S. political campaigns," the letter said. "However, the $TRUMP memecoin, including the promotion of a dinner promising exclusive access to the President, opens the door for foreign governments to buy influence with the President, all without disclosing their identities." The lawmakers "urged" the Public Integrity Section to "determine whether this dinner event violates the federal bribery statute or the foreign emoluments clause of the U.S. Constitution."