Yahoo SportsAndrew RavensJune 8, 2026The UFC and The Trump Organization have collaborated on a set of commemorative coins to mark UFC Freedom 250 on June 14 at the White House in Washington. The coins go on sale June 9, with a waitlist available for interested buyers ahead of that date.There are four coins in the collection, split between two silver and two gold options. One side of each coin features “250” while the other displays Donald Trump, who is said to have designed them personally. The price range is considerable, starting at $249.99 and climbing to $11,999.99 for the top-tier option — the 1 OZ PF70 Trump Coins X UFC Gold Medallion.[...]The release arrives as the White House event continues to attract attention beyond the fights themselves. The card is currently facing a lawsuit seeking to shut it down, and fighter Bryce Mitchell has publicly criticized the event on the grounds that hosting sporting events is not something the government should be involved in. The commemorative coin collaboration is likely to generate its own share of mixed reactions given those circumstances.This is not The Trump Organization’s first foray into branded merchandise, nor its first set of coins. The organization, run by Donald Trump’s sons Donald Jr. and Eric, has previously released a wide range of products under the Trump name, including high-end shoes, watches, and mobile phones.
Oregon LiveBy Maxine BernsteinJun. 03, 2026A judge on Wednesday repeatedly pressed a government lawyer to explain the purpose of a law that bars the images of living people on U.S. currency during a hearing over a planned 24-karat gold coin bearing President Donald Trump’s likeness.The case before U.S. District Judge Karin J. Immergut stems from a lawsuit filed by a retired Portland lawyer challenging the coin’s production to commemorate the nation’s 250th anniversary.Immergut interrupted U.S. Justice Department lawyer Kathryn Barragan at least six times, asking the same question as Barragan instead ticked off the history of an 1866 amendment that became law after the first chief of the the Bureau of Engraving & Printing put his own portrait on a 5-cent paper note.“What’s the purpose. … I don’t want the long-winded version,” the judge interjected.James Rickher, who filed the lawsuit and argued before Immergut, later answered the judge: “The prohibition is designed to avoid political self-promotion.”
The “UFC Freedom 250” event is slated to take place on June 14.TruthoutBy Chris WalkerPublished June 8, 2026A lawsuit filed in federal court this past weekend seeks to block the White House from hosting an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) match on White House grounds next week, an event that would coincide with President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday.The event, “UFC Freedom 250,” is set to occur on June 14. Although it is happening on Trump’s birthday, it is being billed as part of the administration’s planned celebrations for the country’s 250th birthday — despite the match not being authorized or approved by Congress. In preparation for the planned bout, a massive structure called “The Claw” has been erected on the South Lawn of the White House, where the event will take place. The structure surpasses the height of the White House.The Public Integrity Project filed the lawsuit on behalf of two Virginia residents: Susan Douglas, a civic activist and self-identified Democrat; and Paul Romano, a Vietnam War veteran who has previously run for public office as a Republican.[...]Public Integrity Project also notes that Trump, as well as UFC CEO Dana White, will likely personally financially benefit from the event.“Trump purchased up to $50,000 in UFC parent company TKO stock earlier this spring, while White’s company is selling VIP packages for $1.5 million each, and benefiting from what one TKO executive called ‘the greatest earned-marketing tool of all time,'” the organization wrote.In addition to the fight, a weigh-in for the bouts is set to happen at the Lincoln Memorial the night before. Public Integrity Project is seeking to block that from happening, too.
- The Lincoln Memorial: Reserved premium placement for Friday's fighter face-offs.
- The Ellipse: VIP access to Saturday's ceremonial weigh-ins, the Fan Fest, and the Zac Brown Band concert.
- The White House South Lawn: Guaranteed entry into the highly restrictive, 4,300-seat temporary arena for Sunday's fights (where public tickets are completely unavailable).
"The President arranged to hand two of America's most cherished monuments to a private corporation so he and his allies could profit from them. That is corruption," said Susan Douglas. "These monuments belong to all of us Americans, not to Dana White, not to advertisers like Crypto.com, and not to Donald Trump. We're asking the court to enforce the law because the administration refuses to."[...]The complaint identifies three grounds on which the administration's authorization of the event is unlawful and asks the court to order the event halted:Violation of NPS regulations. The White House South Lawn and Lincoln Memorial are federal parklands administered by the National Park Service, where sports events are flatly prohibited under longstanding regulations. The only regulatory exception, the "America250 Rule," applies solely to events "planned, organized, and executed by executive departments and agencies or the Semiquincentennial Commission." The UFC, whose CEO Dana White is a close personal ally of President Trump, is itself planning, organizing, and executing the event. Reporting published June 4 confirms that neither entity competing for the role of official semiquincentennial commission has any organizational responsibility for UFC Freedom 250.No congressional authorization for "the Claw." Under 40 U.S.C. § 8106, no structure may be erected on federal parklands in the District of Columbia without express congressional authorization. No such authorization exists for the UFC's 92-foot, 600-ton steel structure, which the UFC calls "the Claw," that has been under construction on the South Lawn since May 26.Cost to taxpayers. Dana White has estimated that repairing the South Lawn alone will cost $700,000. Under the National Environmental Policy Act, major federal actions with significant environmental effects require a public environmental assessment or impact statement before proceeding. No such review has been conducted or made public. The lawsuit comes as the administration is simultaneously overseeing the illegal demolition of the White House East Wing, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill for the damage to two of the nation's most iconic structures.
The official fight kit for UFC Freedom 250 has been released ahead of the fight card scheduled to happen on June 14.According to the press release, the UFC Freedom 250 fight k
it, which was created in collaboration with popular sports brand Venum, is a “modern expression of the American fighting spirit, built for performance and designed for a moment of true historical significance.”The pieces, of course, featured a prominent red, white, and blue theme since it’s tied to celebrating the United States’ 250th birthday (as well as, at least by implication, Donald Trump’s birthday, which occurs on the day of the fight). The design also includes a White House logo that makes it more than performance wear, but also a way to commemorate history.In addition to the White House logo, there’s an exclusive USA 250 patch and logo that’ll appear on the kit. The patch and logo were created in collaboration with Fanatics, the White House, and America250.
argue, by bundling exclusive monument access into a million-dollar corporate marketing package, the UFC is effectively "renting out" and commercializing a sacred national landmark for private financial gain. This flagrantly violates long-standing federal park regulations and makes an absolute laughingstock out of the Constitution's Emoluments Clauses.








