Sunday, November 17, 2024

SEC is ‘wrongfully attempting’ to police crypto markets: Paradigm counsel

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SEC is ‘wrongfully attempting’ to police crypto markets: Paradigm counsel

Crypto investment firm Paradigm’s Special Counsel Rodrigo Seira has become the latest to slam the United States securities regulator, this time for “wrongfully” pursuing crypto exchange Bittrex in an attempt to police secondary crypto markets.

In a July 11 Twitter thread, Seira added his thoughts after an amicus brief filing from Paradigm, arguing that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s case against U.S.-based crypto exchange Bittrex should be “dismissed” as it relies upon an unreasonable use of the Howey test to make its claims.

On July 7, Paradigm filed an amicus brief, which claimed the financial regulator overstepped its jurisdiction.

In his thread, Seira also pointed out that SEC chair Gary Gensler had previously admitted that crypto exchanges did not have an adequate regulatory framework, making it clear in his view that the regulator lacks sufficient authority to regulate these secondary markets.

Seira made similar arguments in a July 7 blog post, noting the SEC lacks authority because crypto-assets do not involve “investment contracts.” As a result, crypto-assets do not fall under the agency’s remit.

“Until the SEC engages in the rulemaking Coinbase has requested, the digital-assets industry is stuck in limbo, simultaneously told to ‘come in and register’ yet having no effective means of doing so.”

Related: Bittrex challenges SEC’s authority in crypto lawsuit, seeks dismissal

The SEC first filed a complaint against Bittrex on April 17. Nearly two weeks later on April 30, the exchange surrendered its Florida money transmitter license before eventually filing for bankruptcy on May 8.

This also marks the second time that Paradigm has offered its support to a crypto organization facing legal action from the SEC.

On May 11, Paradigm petitioned to file an amicus brief in support of Coinbase which claimed that the SEC had failed to provide clear rules or guidance for digital asset firms in the U.S.

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