What Liberland’s resolution says happened

Liberland, the micronation associated with Justin Sun, has fired its secretary of technology, Dorian Stern Vukotić, according to a “congress resolution” published by Liberland. The resolution also claims he blocked President Vít Jedlička from voting and centralized control of Liberland’s blockchain.

The document’s core allegation targets the Sudo account. In November 2024, Liberland claims Vukotić removed multisig protections from Sudo, which it says “unlawfully centralized control of the Liberland Blockchain.”

Liberland also lists other disputes. In October 2025, it alleges Vukotić tried to take over the Liberland.org web domain. When that allegedly failed, it says he pushed for a fraudulent liberland.io site. Protos reports a prior warning that links Vukotić to an unauthorized token launch tied to the Liberland name.

Governance and token-control claims

Liberland’s resolution points to additional administrative interference. It alleges Vukotić tweaked “critical governance parameters,” increasing the congressional voting period from four days to 75 days while blocking Jedlička’s voting powers.

It also accuses him of mishandling funds. During October 2025, Liberland claims he received money from a “Liberland’s Ministry of Finance,” consisting of BNB and Liberland’s own “Liberland Merit (LLM)” token, to create a trading pair for the two tokens. Liberland says the funds “still haven’t been deployed” and that “Mr. Vukotić refuses to honor the request of the Ministry of Finance and Congress to return these funds.”

Beyond that, Liberland says it wants liquidity back. It demands Vukotić return the funds and hand over control of all liquidity pools to the Ministry of Finance. If he does not comply within seven days, Liberland says Congress will treat continued actions as “defiance and misappropriation” and take “all appropriate measures,” including “public censure.”

The fixes Liberland says it will implement

Liberland says the alleged actions forced changes to how its on-chain governance operates. Protos reports the resolution includes:

  • The congressional voting period will be reverted to four days.
  • Jedlička’s voting powers will be restored.
  • The Sudo account will be transferred to Senate members, with plans to remove the account entirely later.
  • LLM held within the Sudo account will be moved to the Senate.
  • Newly minted tokens will be distributed to Congress.
  • A “three-judge system” with a 2-of-3 multisig wallet arrangement.

Liberland frames “public censure” as a formal public scolding by a government body aimed at an individual. For readers, the practical point is narrower. These moves look like an attempt to unwind concentrated key control and reassign voting authority, under deadlines and internal governance mechanics.

Claim in Liberland’s resolutionWhat Liberland says it affectsDate mentioned in Protos coverage
Multisig protections removed from the Sudo accountAdministrative control becomes centralizedNovember 2024
Vukotić allegedly blocked President Vít Jedlička’s votingPresident’s voting powers reportedly haltedTiming not precisely stated
Governance parameters changedVoting period allegedly changed from four to 75 daysOctober 2025 claim period
Attempted takeover of Liberland.org and push for liberland.ioDomain and identity management allegationsOctober 2025
Received BNB and LLM to create a trading pairFunds allegedly not deployed and not returnedOctober 2025

Who Vukotić says he is, and why this gets messy

Vukotić, in his pitch for the 2026 March congressional election, says he has been involved in the Liberland project since 2021 and that he has lived in Liberland for over a year. Protos reports he also claims personal ties there.

His platform, according to Protos, criticizes Liberland’s direction and transparency. He complains of “disorganization and lack of direction” and says Liberland lacked clarity about money received and how it was spent. He promises budgeting and planning overhauls.

The same pitch includes proposals that range from the bureaucratic to the theatrical. Protos reports he proposes a “Ministry of Propaganda” and an intelligence agency called “The Invisible Hand,” plus an imagined “attack” phase involving bribery and a D-Day-style operation.

Even if you treat campaign language as performance, Protos’ reported governance allegations are what matter for blockchain users and token holders. Administrative key control and voting parameters are not rhetoric. They determine who can steer outcomes on-chain, and how fast.

The Sun connection and the election question

Liberland’s congressional election allegedly elected Vukotić in a “test election.” That same election voted Justin Sun as prime minister seven times, Protos reports. Protos says it is confident Sun has “never set foot in Liberland.”

Liberland’s governance disputes sit on a bigger credibility problem. Protos notes Liberland is not officially recognized by any other country and continues to manage a balancing act between Serbia and Croatia.

As for the immediate dispute, Protos says it reached out to Vukotić for comment and will update the piece if it receives a response.

So what this means for on-chain governance

Liberland’s resolution reads like a rollback plan for concentrated control. It also reads like an internal court order with a seven-day deadline, key transfers, and governance timing restored to prior settings.

That combination is common in small, high-control governance systems. It also carries the risk you would expect. When key custody, voting rights, and liquidity control can be redirected by a small group, you end up with “who controls the keys” becoming the main political question.

Tokens and assets involved in that environment carry real operational risk. Liberland’s promised 2-of-3 multisig “three-judge system” and the movement of LLM out of Sudo are attempts to reduce that risk. But until the alleged control changes are implemented and verified, the dispute stays unresolved.