National Security In Question: SEC’s Crypto Approach Sparks Concern in Congress

By Elena R. (CoinPedia). October 25, 2023.

In a recent interview, Ron Hammond of the Blockchain Association shed light on the bustling crypto-related developments in Washington, D.C. Hammond highlighted two significant hearings this week, one involving the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the other addressing digital assets more broadly.

Speaking to Thinking Crypto, Hammond emphasized a central concern shared by several members of Congress – the SEC’s approach to cryptocurrency and private equity. Recent rules implemented by the SEC have stirred industry-wide concerns, leading to an increased focus on these issues within the Financial Services Committee. Patrick McHenry, the committee’s leader, has been a vocal opponent of the SEC’s stance.

The National Security Subcommittee is set to host another critical hearing, with the primary focus being on the funding mechanisms employed by Hamas for their activities. The objective is to investigate the sources of these funds and whether cryptocurrencies play a role in supporting their actions. Given the pressing nature of national security, this issue has raised concern among policymakers from both sides of the aisle.

Read the full article, with Ron Hammond’s interview included, here: CoinPedia

In Landmark SEC Surrender, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen Are Cleared Of All Baseless Allegations

Business Wire. October 19, 2023.

Ripple, the leader in enterprise blockchain and crypto solutions, announced today that CEO Brad Garlinghouse and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen were cleared of all claims brought against them by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SEC voted to dismiss charges with prejudice – a stunning capitulation by the government.

This victory is the third consecutive triumph for Garlinghouse, Larsen, and Ripple, coming on the heels of the July 2023 ruling that declared “XRP is not, in and of itself a security” and a subsequent October decision to deny the SEC’s request for an interlocutory appeal.

“For nearly three years, Chris and I have been the subject of baseless allegations from a rogue regulator with a political agenda,” said Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse. “Instead of looking for the criminals stealing customer funds on offshore exchanges that were courting political favor, the SEC went after the good guys – along with our entire company of innovators and entrepreneurs – who are building a regulated business based in the U.S. We look forward to the day this chapter is closed once and for all, now that the SEC has dropped the curtain on their absurd theatrics against Chris and me.”

Read the full article here.

Drama in U.S. Congress over Speaker of the House leaves crypto legislation on pause

By Sarah Wynn. (The Block). October 12, 2023.

The race between Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., and Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is tight, as House Republicans gather on Thursday to see if there could be enough votes for Scalise. 

Prospects for a more permanent U.S. House speaker are not looking up, which could kick cryptocurrency legislation further down the road.

The race between Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., and Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is tight, as House Republicans gather on Thursday to see if there could be enough votes for Scalise. 

“The general consensus from many folks that we’re talking to is that this does not seem like it’s going to get solved this week,” said Ron Hammond, director of government relations at the Blockchain Association. 

Read the full story from The Block here: “Drama in U.S. Congress over Speaker of the House leaves crypto legislation on pause.”

Crypto Needs Congress, But U.S. Lawmakers Have Opted for Pandemonium

By Jesse Hamilton. (CoinDesk). October 9, 2023.

Without the U.S. Congress outlining a clear system of rules, the crypto industry fears it’ll be relegated as a volatile financial backwater. But Capitol Hill is beset by drama, including a U.S. House of Representatives that fired its speaker and a budget debate that could derail the federal government.

Two crypto bills are carrying a lot of the sector’s hopes, because they’ve made it further than any legislation to date: one House bill that would establish rules for digital assets markets and another that would set up regulations for issuing and trading stablecoins in the U.S. Until now, Crypto lobbyists thought that both pieces of legislation had a shot to reach the House floor in November.

The problems: Nov. 17 is the new deadline for a government shutdown, unless Congress can agree to a spending plan it wasn’t able to execute last month. And one of the top voices in that negotiation is the speaker of the House. Republicans dumped the speaker, Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), in an unprecedented fashion and are yet to pick a new one.

Read the full piece from CoinDesk here: “Crypto Needs Congress, But U.S. Lawmakers Have Opted for Pandemonium.”

Crypto Has ‘No Innate or Inherent Value’, SEC Argues in Coinbase Case

By Nicholas Morgan. (Decrypt). October 8, 2023.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is arguing that cryptocurrencies lack any “innate or inherent value” as part of their case against Coinbase in federal court—prompting eye rolls from Coinbase and crypto watchers.

In response to a motion to throw out the agency’s lawsuit filed over the summer, the SEC petitioned a judge to reject Coinbase’s stance that cryptocurrency trading does not count as an investment contract between parties. It justified its position by repeating its position that federal securities laws are designed to be interpreted flexibly through the legal doctrine known as the “Howey Test.”

Read the full piece from Decrypt here: “Crypto Has ‘No Innate or Inherent Value’, SEC Argues in Coinbase Case

SEC’s Motion to Appeal Loss in Ripple Case Is Denied

By Nikhilesh De. (CoinDesk). October 4, 2023.

A federal judge has rejected the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s bid to appeal its ground-shaking loss against Ripple, the crypto company associated with the XRP token.

XRP’s price rallied about 5% on the news.

District Judge Analisa Torres said in a brief ruling Tuesday that the SEC had failed to meet its burden under the law to show that there were controlling questions of law or that there are substantial grounds for differences of opinion.

Read the full piece from CoinDesk here: “SEC’s Motion to Appeal Loss in Ripple Case Is Denied

US SEC asks judge to deny Coinbase motion to dismiss its lawsuit

By Hannah Lang and Chris Prentice. (Reuters). October 3, 2023.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Tuesday asked a federal judge to deny a motion from Coinbase Global (COIN.O) to dismiss the regulator’s lawsuit against the cryptocurrency exchange.

The agency said Coinbase was wrong to rely on a recent court ruling that found cryptocurrency developer Ripple Labs Inc did not violate federal securities law by selling its XRP token on public exchanges, citing a subsequent ruling in the case of Terraform Labs that rejected the court’s reasoning.

Tuesday’s filing showed that the SEC is seizing on the Terraform Labs ruling to raise questions about the ruling in the Ripple case, which the crypto industry had hailed as a victory.

Read the full piece from Reuters here: “US SEC asks judge to deny Coinbase motion to dismiss its lawsuit

The Irony of Interlocutory Appeal

By John E. Deaton.

Following Ripple’s victory in July, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) scrambled to save face by filing an appeal that fits their narrative. In August, the SEC sent a letter of intent to move for interlocutory appeal to Judge Torres. The letter outlined the agency’s intent to seek interlocutory appeal on the Judge’s ruling that the defendants’ programmatic sales and other sales of XRP failed the Howey test.

As I wrote when the letter was sent, I expected Judge Torres to grant the motion, and that is exactly what she did. I believe the move allows the judge to fully explain her reasoning in the case, further making it “appeal-proof,” as well as providing her the opportunity to address anything Judge Jed Rakoff has said. Judge Rakoff, presiding over the SEC v. Terraform Labs case, rejected the company’s motion to dismiss, and disagreed with Judge Torres’ approach regarding Howey. The SEC alleges that Torres’ ruling could impact their other lawsuits, which are of a similar nature. However, this is the weakest of their arguments.

With the right to file a formal motion for an interlocutory appeal granted, Judge Torres can now distinguish between her actual ruling in the Ripple case, versus what Judge Rakoff purported it to be. It was the SEC who categorized the different sales, not Judge Torres.

Recently, the SEC has filed its reply memorandum in further support of its motion to certify interlocutory appeal, now claiming that it is only interested in an efficient adjudication of the case, unlike Ripple, who the SEC contends wishes to prolong litigation. (Laughable, I know).

The facts are as follows: the SEC is asking for a stay on everything—which by definition and operation, would automatically prolong the entire litigation. Similarly, as there is still a trial that needs to take place, an interlocutory appeal would not end litigation and would add an appeal to the overall process. Should an early appeal be granted, it will take another year and a half to two years for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit to rule on the issue.

If the SEC were to win at the 2nd Circuit, which I believe they won’t, then the case gets remanded back to Judge Torres, who would apply the facts of the case to the other Howey factors not yet analyzed.

In other words, even if the 2nd Circuit disagrees with Judge Torres’ analysis of Howey’s third prong, the SEC does not win at summary judgment. Instead, Judge Torres would then apply the investment prong and the common enterprise prong of the Howey test, again, further prolonging the case.

I believe Judge Torres could, should, and would, give the same result even after a successful SEC interlocutory appeal. The SEC then could ask for a second interlocutory appeal to the 2nd Circuit on Torres’ common enterprise analysis.

Now, if the SEC loses at the 2nd Circuit, the case comes back to Torres for trial. Then after the trial, there would be the usual appeal on all issues. The SEC’s claim that it wants faster adjudication than Ripple does, might be the dumbest argument I’ve heard yet. It flies in the face of its request for an early appeal, while asking for a stay!

This irony is exactly what the motion for interlocutory appeal boils down to. The SEC has attempted to regulate by enforcement through the courts, and now that the agency has received a ruling it deems incorrect, the SEC will spitball separate arguments from ongoing cases into its appeal process—delaying litigation across the board. These are the desperate tactics of a regulator who lost the case.

The SEC Is Not the King

By Frank Francone. (RealClear Policy). September 28, 2023.

In late 2020, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) sued Ripple Labs, Inc. (Ripple), and two of its top executives, Brad Garlinghouse and Chris Larsen, alleging that the cryptocurrency XRP which is used by the company in its financial services products is a “security” under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934. 

Dubbed “the cryptocurrency case of the century” by Forbes, the SEC sought billions of dollars from Ripple and its founders for seven years of XRP sales without registering the token with their agency. The civil filing, based on a sweeping legal theory that a digital asset itself is a security, immediately destroyed more than $15 billion dollars in wealth of innocent holders of XRP who had acquired the token on the secondary markets.

On July 13, 2023, Judge Analisa Torres rejected the SEC’s argument that sales of XRP on exchanges is the sale of a security. Torres ruled that sales by Garlinghouse, Larsen and the hundreds of thousands of secondary market traders of XRP on crypto exchanges were blind-bid transactions, where the parties do not know each other nor the provenance of the assets being traded. Therefore, they couldn’t have been securities. 

Read the full piece by Frank Francone in RealClear Policy here: “The SEC Is Not the King”

Grayscale, Ripple court rulings ‘big black eyes’ to the SEC: Cato Institute’s Jennifer Schulp

By CNBC. September 27, 2023.

Jennifer Schulp, the director of financial regulation studies at the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, who testified before lawmakers a few weeks after FTX filed for bankruptcy, weighs in on crypto regulatory developments in the U.S. She also discusses the impact of the recent Grayscale and Ripple rulings on the industry.

Watch the video here: “Grayscale, Ripple court rulings ‘big black eyes’ to the SEC: Cato Institute’s Jennifer Schulp