"Wholly Irrelevant": SEC Hits Back at Ripple
07/04/2024 02:34The SEC says that the part of the Binance ruling cited by Ripple is completely irrelevant
The SEC says that the part of the Binance ruling cited by Ripple is completely irrelevant
The US Securities and Exchange Commission has hit back at Ripple in its response to the defendant's notice of supplemental authority.
As reported by U.Today, Ripple cited a recent Binance ruling in its notice to highlight that the SEC's "regulation-by-enforcement" approach is not efficient. Ripple pointed to the lack of regulatory clarity in order to bolster its argument against the agency.
However, the SEC has slammed the attempt to insert the Binance case into the ongoing remedies-related dispute. The agency's Jorge Tenreiro has noted that it is "completely irrelevant" to the current motion.
Moreover, the SEC argues that Ripple actually omitted one relevant part from the Binance ruling that rejected the argument that the fair notice doctrine can actually provide a defense to liability.
In fact, the ruling says that the agency was enforcing a "decades-old federal security statute." Moreover, it did say that the crypto industry had been put on notice by the agency with the 2017 DAO report that predates the vast majority of Ripple's XRP sales.
John Reed Stark, a former SEC official, argued that the Binance ruling was a "mammoth loss" for the exchange.
The SEC has also recalled that Ripple received advice from its counsel about possible legal troubles caused by such sales, meaning that it had an actual notice.
As reported by U.Today, Ripple filed its opposition to the agency's motion for remedies in April, arguing that the civil penalty should not be higher than $10 million. The SEC previously argued that Ripple had to shell out $2 billion.
About the author
Alex Dovbnya
Alex Dovbnya (aka AlexMorris) is a cryptocurrency expert, trader and journalist with extensive experience of covering everything related to the burgeoning industry — from price analysis to Blockchain disruption. Alex authored more than 1,000 stories for U.Today, CryptoComes and other fintech media outlets. He’s particularly interested in regulatory trends around the globe that are shaping the future of digital assets, can be contacted at [email protected].
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